1735-1748Lea and Blanchard, 1842 - Authors, English |
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Page xx
... Marriage of the Duchess of Bridgewater and Dick Lyttelton . A good Irish letter 1746 . 453 455 - - 457 To Sir Horace Mann , Jan. 3. - Recapture of Carlisle . General Hawley . Preparations at Dunkirk . Ministerial movements To the same ...
... Marriage of the Duchess of Bridgewater and Dick Lyttelton . A good Irish letter 1746 . 453 455 - - 457 To Sir Horace Mann , Jan. 3. - Recapture of Carlisle . General Hawley . Preparations at Dunkirk . Ministerial movements To the same ...
Page xxi
... marriage · · To Sir Horace Mann , Aug. 12. - Opera squabbles . The Violette . Lord Sandwich's embassy . Marriage of Lady Charlotte Fermor , and of the Princess Louisa to the King of Denmark . Wanderings of the young Pretender . Conduct ...
... marriage · · To Sir Horace Mann , Aug. 12. - Opera squabbles . The Violette . Lord Sandwich's embassy . Marriage of Lady Charlotte Fermor , and of the Princess Louisa to the King of Denmark . Wanderings of the young Pretender . Conduct ...
Page 48
... married . She also was named Mary Walpole , and married Colonel Charles Churchill , the natural son of General Churchill ; who was himself a natural son of an elder brother of the great Duke of Marlborough . Horace Walpole was born ...
... married . She also was named Mary Walpole , and married Colonel Charles Churchill , the natural son of General Churchill ; who was himself a natural son of an elder brother of the great Duke of Marlborough . Horace Walpole was born ...
Page 57
... married her . The wretched , guilty mother , learning what had happened , and distracted with the consequence of her crime , had now resorted to the archbishop , to know in what manner she should act . The prelate charged her never to ...
... married her . The wretched , guilty mother , learning what had happened , and distracted with the consequence of her crime , had now resorted to the archbishop , to know in what manner she should act . The prelate charged her never to ...
Page 69
... married to the famous Philip Stanhope , Earl of Chesterfield . The following is the account of this introduction given in " Walpoliana : " - " I do remember something of George the First . My father took me to St. James's while I was a ...
... married to the famous Philip Stanhope , Earl of Chesterfield . The following is the account of this introduction given in " Walpoliana : " - " I do remember something of George the First . My father took me to St. James's while I was a ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adieu Admiral afterwards Amorevoli answer Argyll Arlington Street army asked believe brother called Charles Wager Chute Conway Countess court daughter dear child death died Dominichin Duchess Duke of Newcastle eldest England English father Flanders Florence France French George give Granville hear heard honour hope Horace Walpole Houghton Jacobite King King's laugh letter London Lord Carteret Lord Chesterfield Lord Gower Lord Hervey Lord Lincoln Lord Orford Lord Stair Madame Marlborough married minister ministry Montagu morning never night opera parliament Patapan Pelham Pitt Pomfret Pope Pretender Prince of Wales Princess Pultney Queen received second Earl Secret Committee sent Sir Charles Sir Francis Dashwood SIR HORACE MANN Sir John Sir Robert Walpole sister sure talk tell thing thought thousand pounds to-day to-morrow told Tories town treasury Viscount vote Walpole's week wife William Winnington write yesterday young
Popular passages
Page 457 - ' said Lamb, "that were ever paid by the wit of man. Each of them is worth an estate for life — nay, is an immortality. There is that superb one to Lord Cornbury: 'Despise low joys, low gains; Disdain whatever Cornbury disdains; Be virtuous, and be happy for your pains.
Page 196 - I remember an instance : when I published the Plan for my Dictionary, Lord Chesterfield told me that the word great should be pronounced so as to rhyme to state ; and Sir William Yonge sent me word that it should be pronounced so as to rhyme to seat, and that none but an Irishman would pronounce it grait l.
Page 129 - Lord ! how great I used to think anybody just landed at the Christopher ! But here are no boys for me to send for — here I am, like Noah, just returned into his old world again, with all sorts of queer feels about me. By the way, the clock strikes the old cracked sound — I recollect so much, and remember so little...
Page 501 - Pretender was so sweet a Prince that flesh and blood could not resist following him ; and lying down to try the block, he said, ' If I had a thousand lives, I would lay them all down here in the same cause.
Page 52 - You perceive by my date that I am got into a new camp, and have left my tub at Windsor. It is a little play-thinghouse that I got out of Mrs. Chenevix's shop, and is the prettiest bauble you ever saw. It is set in enamelled meadows, with filigree hedges : A small Euphrates through the piece is roll'd, And little finches wave their wings in gold.
Page 501 - ... arm, as if he were giving the signal for battle. He received three blows, but the first certainly took away all sensation. He was not a quarter of an hour on the scaffold ; Lord Kilmarnock above half a one. Balmerino certainly died with the intrepidity of a hero, but with the insensibility of one too. As he walked from his prison to execution, seeing every window and top of house filled with spectators, he cried out, 'Look, look, how they are all piled up like rotten oranges!
Page 500 - Balmerino followed, alone, in a blue coat, turned up with red, (his rebellious regimentals), a flannel waistcoat, and his shroud beneath; their hearses following. They were conducted to a house near the scaffold: the room forwards had benches for spectators, in the second Lord Kilmarnock was put, and in the third backwards Lord Balmerino: all three chambers hung with black. Here they parted! Balmerino embraced the other, and said, "My lord, I wish I could suffer for both!
Page 406 - He exercis'd his troops, the signal given, Flew off at once with his Numidian horse To the south gate, where Marcus holds the watch. I saw, and call'd to stop him, but in vain, He toss'd his arm aloft, and proudly told me He would not stay and perish like Sempronius.
Page 56 - Romanorum," the author of the Mysterious Mother, a tragedy of the highest order, and not a puling love-play. He is the father of the first romance, and of the last tragedy in our language, and surely worthy of a higher place than any living writer, be he who he may.
Page 497 - Heaven ! of woes like ours, And let us, let us weep no more." The dismal scene was o'er and past, The lover's mournful hearse retired The maid drew back her languid head, And, sighing forth his name, expired.