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Page xxiii
... be reprinted for centuries to come , are his Letters , The Mysterious Mother , and The Anecdotes of Painting in England . If the metaphor be not quaint , 1 quaint , the last may be confidered as the bafis BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH . xxiii.
... be reprinted for centuries to come , are his Letters , The Mysterious Mother , and The Anecdotes of Painting in England . If the metaphor be not quaint , 1 quaint , the last may be confidered as the bafis BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH . xxiii.
Page xxiv
Horace Walpole. quaint , the last may be confidered as the bafis of his column of celebrity , the let- ters as the shaft , the tragedy as a finish- ed capital . The amiable ease , and play- ful elegance ... last may be confidered as the ...
Horace Walpole. quaint , the last may be confidered as the bafis of his column of celebrity , the let- ters as the shaft , the tragedy as a finish- ed capital . The amiable ease , and play- ful elegance ... last may be confidered as the ...
Page xxxiii
... last years were unhappy to himself , tormenting to the patience of his fervants , and difaftrous to fome of his old and valued friendships . On the 2d of March , 1797 , he expired at his houfe in Berkeley - fquare , in the eightieth ...
... last years were unhappy to himself , tormenting to the patience of his fervants , and difaftrous to fome of his old and valued friendships . On the 2d of March , 1797 , he expired at his houfe in Berkeley - fquare , in the eightieth ...
Page xxxviii
... last longer than his bones ; fuch conscious vigour and ftrength in thofe parts did he feel from the use of that beverage . Occafionally he would go in an evening to vifit Mrs Clive , to whom he had affign ed an adjacent cottage . The ...
... last longer than his bones ; fuch conscious vigour and ftrength in thofe parts did he feel from the use of that beverage . Occafionally he would go in an evening to vifit Mrs Clive , to whom he had affign ed an adjacent cottage . The ...
Page 58
... last articles it is impoffi- ble to think more differently than we do . In Lady Mary's letters , which I never could read but once , I discovered no merit of any fort ; yet I have seen others by her ( unpublished ) that have a good deal ...
... last articles it is impoffi- ble to think more differently than we do . In Lady Mary's letters , which I never could read but once , I discovered no merit of any fort ; yet I have seen others by her ( unpublished ) that have a good deal ...
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Common terms and phrases
afked againſt almoft anecdotes anfwered aſked becauſe beſt caftle called compofition converfation Countess of Suffolk defired Duchefs Duke Earl expreffed fafely faid fame faſhion father fatire feems fenfe fent feven fhall fhew fhort fhould fincerely fingular firft firſt fome fometimes foon fpirit France French ftate ftill ftyle fubject fuch fuperior fuppofed fure furpriſe grace Guife herſelf Hiftory himſelf Horace Walpole houfe houſe Hudibras humble fervant huſband intereft king Lady laft laſt loft Lord Lord Bute Louis XIV Madame Mafon Mifs moft moſt muft muſt myſelf never obferved occafion Original Letter paffed paffions perfon philofopher pleaſe pleaſure portraits prefent Prince publiſhed Queen racter raiſed reafon ſaid ſay ſhe Sir Robert Walpole ſmall Strawberry-hill ſtyle ſuch Tacitus tafte taſte theſe thing thofe thoſe thouſand tion told underſtand uſed vifit Voltaire Walpole's whig whofe wife write
Popular passages
Page 95 - I know from indubitable authority, that his mother, who kept a school, having run in debt on account of an extravagant daughter, would have rotted in jail, if the parents of her scholars had not raised a subscription for her. Her son had too much sentiment to have any feeling. A dead ass was more important to him than a living mother.
Page 24 - Newcastle had fallen into a mistake, to send for him, and read him a lecture. The duke was sent for once, and came when Mr. Pitt was confined to bed by the gout. There was, as usual, no fire in the room ; the day was very chilly, and the duke, as usual, afraid of catching cold. The duke...
Page 196 - ... gentlemen, his friends, they determined to pass the night in the same apartment; and if any noise or apparition disturbed them, to discharge their pistols at either ghost or sound. As spirits- know all things, they were probably aware of these preparations, and not one appeared. But, in the chamber just above, a dreadful rattling of chains was heard ; and the wife and children of the farmer ran to assist their lord. They threw themselves on their knees, begging that he would not visit that terrible...
Page 7 - Caroline fpoke of fhutting up St. James's Park, and converting it into a noble garden for the palace of that name. She afked my father* what it might probably coft ; who replied,
Page 76 - Grub-street thing from the garret. The author, in sheer ignorance, not humour, discoursing of the difficulty of some pursuit, said, that even if a man had as many lives as a cat, nay, as many lives as one Plutarch is said to have had, he could not accomplish it.
Page xxxv - Deffand ; and which ease and attention had rendered so fat that it could hardly move. This was placed beside him on a small sofa ; the tea-kettle, stand, and heater, were brought in, and he drank two or three cups of that liquor out of most rare and precious ancient porcelain of Japan, of a fine white, embossed with large leaves.
Page 2 - Pfttriottfm of Wilkes. Depend upon it, my dear Sir, that "Wilkes was in the pay of France, during the Wilkes and liberty days. Calling one day on the French minifter, I obferved a book on his table, with Wilkes's name in the firft leaf.
Page 96 - Plato is indeed the philofopher of imagination— but is not this faying that he is no philofopher at all ? I have been told that Rolt, who afterwards wrote many books, was in Dublin when that poem appeared.
Page 54 - Atheism I dislike. It is gloomy, uncomfortable ; and, in my eye, unnatural and irrational. It certainly requires more credulity to believe that there is no God, than to believe that there is.
Page 198 - The rogue confessed all his tricks; and was pardoned on paying the arrears due for five years, at the old rent of the land.