The Works, Band 16J. Johnson, 1803 |
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Seite 9
... whole country that ought to be preferred . We are now adjourned for a fortnight , and the commons for three weeks . I hear our lord lieutenant is not well pleased , that we have adjourned short of them and I fancy the queen will not be ...
... whole country that ought to be preferred . We are now adjourned for a fortnight , and the commons for three weeks . I hear our lord lieutenant is not well pleased , that we have adjourned short of them and I fancy the queen will not be ...
Seite 11
... whole affair . When I writ to you before , I dropped a word on purpose for you to take notice of ; that our court seemed resolved to be very firm in their resolutions about Ireland . I think it impossible for the two kingdoms to proceed ...
... whole affair . When I writ to you before , I dropped a word on purpose for you to take notice of ; that our court seemed resolved to be very firm in their resolutions about Ireland . I think it impossible for the two kingdoms to proceed ...
Seite 14
... whole by that bishoprick ; and he might , if he pleased , in a little time have received sixteen or seventeen * Dr. William Lloyd . N. hundred pounds for fines ; so that if this comes 14 LETTERS TO AND FROM DR . SWIFT . From lord ...
... whole by that bishoprick ; and he might , if he pleased , in a little time have received sixteen or seventeen * Dr. William Lloyd . N. hundred pounds for fines ; so that if this comes 14 LETTERS TO AND FROM DR . SWIFT . From lord ...
Seite 58
... whole to his own advantage . If it had come to me yester day , or to day , I was resolved to have sent it to some other printer without any amendment ; but now I shall wait till I have your directions . I wish you had employed somebody ...
... whole to his own advantage . If it had come to me yester day , or to day , I was resolved to have sent it to some other printer without any amendment ; but now I shall wait till I have your directions . I wish you had employed somebody ...
Seite 60
... whole Cavendish estate , which is valued at ten thousand per annum , and has upon it forty thousand pounds worth of timber . But three out of this ten thousand a year he had by the will . He remits to lord Pelham the twen ty thousand ...
... whole Cavendish estate , which is valued at ten thousand per annum , and has upon it forty thousand pounds worth of timber . But three out of this ten thousand a year he had by the will . He remits to lord Pelham the twen ty thousand ...
Inhalt
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291 | |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquaintance Adieu affairs answer Arbuthnot archbishop assure believe bishop BISHOP ATTERBURY bishop of Clogher bishop of Rochester bishoprick brother church court dean deanery DEAR SIR Derry desire Dragon Dublin duchess DUCHESS OF ORMOND duke earl of Oxford endeavour England esteem favour Ford friends friendship George Ashe give glad grace hear Herefordshire honour hope house of lords humble servant Ireland July king kingdom lady Masham late letter live London lord Bolingbroke lord Harley lord Oxford lord treasurer lordship manner ministers ministry never obedient obliged occasion opinion Ormond parliament party person pleased politicks Pope Pray present pretender publick queen reason received remember sent spleen sure Swift talk tell thank thing thought tion told tories town trouble WARTON week whigs wish writ write
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 264 - What can be the design of your letter but malice, to wake me out of a scurvy sleep, which however is better than none ? I am towards nine years older since I left you, yet that is the least of my alterations ; my business, my diversions, my conversations, are all entirely changed for the worse, and so are my studies and my amusements in writing ; yet, after all, this humdrum way of life might be passable enough, if you would let me alone.
Seite 119 - I think of the probable consequences of these proceedings, perhaps upon the very peace of the nation, but certainly of the minds of so many hundred thousand good subjects ? Upon the whole, you may truly attribute my silence to the Eclipse, but it was that Eclipse which happened on the first of August.
Seite 282 - I have often endeavoured to establish a friendship among all men of genius, and would fain have it done. They are seldom above three or four contemporaries, and if they could be united, would drive the world before them.
Seite 71 - I was resolved to stay till I could tell you the queen had got so far the better of the dragon, as to take her power out of his hands. He has been the most ungrateful man to her, and to all his best friends, that ever was born. I cannot have so much time now to write all my mind, because my dear mistress is not well, and I think I may lay her illness to the charge of the treasurer, who, for three weeks together, was teazing and vexing her without intermission, and she could not get rid of him till...
Seite 136 - Squire Burnet, Blackmore, and a few others, whose fame I have forgot : tools, in my opinion, as necessary for a good writer, as pen, ink, and paper. And besides, I would fain know whether every draper does not...
Seite 282 - Augustus ; but envy, and party, and pride, have hindered it among us. I do not include the subalterns, of which you are seldom without a large tribe. Under the name of poets and scribblers I suppose you mean the fools you are content to...
Seite 220 - I will tell you what my political principles were in the time of her late glorious majesty, which I never contradicted by any action, writing, or discourse.
Seite 277 - I have been, then, infinitely more uniform, and less dissipated, than when you knew me and cared for me. That love which I used to scatter with some profusion among the female kind, has been these many years devoted to one subject...
Seite 37 - ... or, if your disposition should not be so mathematical, in taking it with you to that place where men of studious minds are apt to sit longer than ordinary ; where, after an abrupt division of the paper, it may not be unpleasant to try to fit and rejoin the broken lines together. All these amusements I am no stranger to in the country, and doubt not but (by this time) you begin to relish them, in your present contemplative situation. I remember a man who was thought to have some knowledge in the...
Seite 214 - I came to my station here ; where I have continued ever since in the greatest privacy, and utter ignorance of those events which are most commonly talked of in the world.