Retrospective Review, Том 7Henry Southern, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas C. and H. Baldwyn, 1823 |
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Страница 298
... Clarimond ; it is a secret that all gardeners know not ; nay , I will cast it above , and it shall moisten you so much the more : know you not , that the rain falls straight down on the tops of the trees . " Clarimond having said so ...
... Clarimond ; it is a secret that all gardeners know not ; nay , I will cast it above , and it shall moisten you so much the more : know you not , that the rain falls straight down on the tops of the trees . " Clarimond having said so ...
Страница 303
... Clarimond . Thou shalt dedicate it to me too , and shalt make either of us an epistle . But here is one thing troubles me extremely to know , when the book is bound up in red Spanish leather , with our characters upon it , whether thou ...
... Clarimond . Thou shalt dedicate it to me too , and shalt make either of us an epistle . But here is one thing troubles me extremely to know , when the book is bound up in red Spanish leather , with our characters upon it , whether thou ...
Страница 304
... Clarimond : but though your adventures be already very eminent , and able to sa- tisfy the most disdainful and nauseous intellects , yet I should intreat you to add to , and heighten them if it may be possible , that so the work may be ...
... Clarimond : but though your adventures be already very eminent , and able to sa- tisfy the most disdainful and nauseous intellects , yet I should intreat you to add to , and heighten them if it may be possible , that so the work may be ...
Страница 305
... Clarimond , the author of the Banquet of the Gods , not bearing to see the well - meaning tradesman in such perplexity , undertakes the cure of the Extravagant Shepherd ; and to that end , pronounces a long speech against all romance ...
... Clarimond , the author of the Banquet of the Gods , not bearing to see the well - meaning tradesman in such perplexity , undertakes the cure of the Extravagant Shepherd ; and to that end , pronounces a long speech against all romance ...
Страница 306
... Clarimond succeeds in inducing Lysis to perceive , that as he had succeeded in imposing , by a feigned death , on his uncle , so had he been himself the willing dupe of the various impos- tures practised upon him - a deep sense of shame ...
... Clarimond succeeds in inducing Lysis to perceive , that as he had succeeded in imposing , by a feigned death , on his uncle , so had he been himself the willing dupe of the various impos- tures practised upon him - a deep sense of shame ...
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appears Bacon beauty believe better body brother called character Charité Charles church Clarimond court dead death desire doth doubt Duke Duke of Burgundy Dutch Dutchess Earl England extract eyes father favour fear feeling Flamel Friar friends gentleman Gerund give hand hath head heard heart heaven Hermippus honour Horace Walpole James judgement king King of England king's lady Laud light live look Lord Lord Chatham Lucretius Lysis majesty manner master mind Moth murder nature never Newgate Calendar night noble observed opinion passage person poet poison'd poor pray present prince prison racter readers reason Robert Mansel seems Sir Robert Sir Robert Howard Somerset soul speak spirit sword tell thee thing thou thought tion told took trial true truth Tyburn Virginius writers
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