Jack ! all my credit for successful gallantry has been extinguished, and my ardour in the chase been gradually evaporating, ever since that very unseasonable phlebotomical operation, which was performed upon me by Dick Merryman, some years ago. A little... Bath Characters, Or, Sketches from Life - Page 11by Richard Warner - 1808 - 162 pagesFull view - About this book
| Richard Warner - 1807 - 98 pages
...specimen of every degree of rank, from the duchess to the spouse of the squire. But — -fuimus — Jack ! all my credit for successful gallantry has been extinguished,...obligations to him by carrying off the bird to his own nest. — But, d— n it, don't make me melancholy by recalling past grievances to my recollection.... | |
| A. Barbeau - Bath (England) - 1904 - 426 pages
...obtint qu'il fît trêve à ses outrageantes tentatives. M"e Linley fut pour un temps hors de peine 2. evaporating, ever since that very unseasonable phlebotomical...settle it; he pinked my doublet as full of holes as a schoot-girl's sampler, and completed my obligations to him by carrying off the bird to his own nest,... | |
| Alfred Barbeau - Bath (England) - 1904 - 432 pages
...Linley fut pour un temps hors de peine 3. evaporating, ever since that very unseasonable pklebotomical operation, which was performed upon me by Dick Merryman...settle it; he pinked my doublet as full of holes as a sehool-girl's sampler, and completed my obligations to him by carrying off the bird to his own nest,... | |
| Walter Sydney Sichel - Dramatists, English - 1909 - 728 pages
...specimen of every degree of rank, from the duchess to the spouse of the squire. But — fuimus, Jack ! All my credit for successful gallantry has been extinguished,...obligations to him by carrying off the bird to his own nest." And that he was quite capable of giving a turn to his case appears from another sentence in... | |
| Walter Sichel - 1909 - 732 pages
...and my ardour in the chase been gradually evaporating ever since that very unseasonablephlcbotomical operation which was performed upon me by Dick Merryman...obligations to him by carrying off the bird to his own nest." And that he was quite capable of giving a turn to his case appears from another sentence in... | |
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