The New Wonderful Museum, and Extraordinary Magazine:: Being a Complete Repository of All the Wonders, Curiosities, and Rarities of Nature and Art, from the Beginning of the World to the Present Year ... Including, Among the Greatest Variety of Other Valuable Matter in this Line of Literature (from an Illustrated Edition of the Rev. Mr. James Granger's Celebrated Biographical History) Memoirs and Portraits of the Most Singular and Remarkable Persons ...R. S. Kirby, 1807 - Characters and characteristics |
From inside the book
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Page 2224
... poor , though in every age there are fome , who , as Shake- . speare fays , taking the " tide " of their affairs at the pro- per time , rife fuddenly into riches ; but the bulk of man- kind must owe their affluence to small and gradual ...
... poor , though in every age there are fome , who , as Shake- . speare fays , taking the " tide " of their affairs at the pro- per time , rife fuddenly into riches ; but the bulk of man- kind must owe their affluence to small and gradual ...
Page 2238
... poor and lefs fuccessful brethren . Mr. Lemoine divides the world into two claffes ; the would be , and the has been : yet to neither of which he feems to belong , for while the first brag , and the other complain , he constantly ...
... poor and lefs fuccessful brethren . Mr. Lemoine divides the world into two claffes ; the would be , and the has been : yet to neither of which he feems to belong , for while the first brag , and the other complain , he constantly ...
Page 2292
... poor hermit can have but one , left he fhould be removed ( as the prior of the convent has a power to do ) to fome other cell , for that is sometimes done , and very properly . The youngest and most hardy constitutions are generally put ...
... poor hermit can have but one , left he fhould be removed ( as the prior of the convent has a power to do ) to fome other cell , for that is sometimes done , and very properly . The youngest and most hardy constitutions are generally put ...
Page 2293
... poor criminal who suffered at Dijon , O God ! O God ! at every coup . 1 I was forry my hoft did not understand English , nor I Spanish enough , to give him the fenfe of the lines written in poor Shenftone's alcove . " O you that bathe ...
... poor criminal who suffered at Dijon , O God ! O God ! at every coup . 1 I was forry my hoft did not understand English , nor I Spanish enough , to give him the fenfe of the lines written in poor Shenftone's alcove . " O you that bathe ...
Page 2336
... poor dejected husband , who is fecretly pleased to find another is fallen into his cafe . A death , if a wife , makes husbands envy the widower , while perhaps fome of the women who cenfure his want of decent forrow , marry him in a ...
... poor dejected husband , who is fecretly pleased to find another is fallen into his cafe . A death , if a wife , makes husbands envy the widower , while perhaps fome of the women who cenfure his want of decent forrow , marry him in a ...
Common terms and phrases
affiftance againſt alfo almoſt alſo anſwer appeared bookfeller bufinefs buſineſs cafe caufe cauſe Charles circumftance cloſe confequence confiderable converfation curious deceaſed defire diſcovered duke Engliſh eſcape eſtabliſhed faid fame fatire fays fecond feemed fent fervants fervice feven feveral fhall fhew fhort fide fince fingular firft firſt fituation fmall foldiers fome fometimes foon friends ftate ftill fubject fuccefs fuch fuffered fupported gentleman greateſt heard herſelf Hiftory himſelf honour houfe houſe intereſting king laft laſt leaſt lefs London Lord mafter Major André meaſure Mifs moft moſt mourning cloaks mourning coach muſt myſelf neceffary never Newcastle upon Tyne newſpaper night noiſes North Briton obferved occafion paffed Patch perfon prefent prifoner publiſhed purpoſe reafon refpecting ſay ſeemed ſeen ſeveral ſhe ſhould ſmall ſome ſpeak ſtate ſtill ſuch thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe thouſand ufual uſed vifit whofe whoſe wife Wilkes
Popular passages
Page 2614 - I have observed among all nations, that the women ornament themselves more than the men ; that, wherever found, they are the same kind, civil, obliging, humane, tender beings; that they are ever inclined to be gay and cheerful, timorous and modest.
Page 2441 - The North Briton," in which I have been named or even alluded to, was written by...
Page 2374 - The mind can hardly form an idea more magnificent than such a space, supported on each side by ranges of columns and roofed by the bottoms of those, which have been broke off in order to form it; between the angles of which a yellow stalagmitic matter has exuded, which serves to define the angles precisely, and at the same time vary the colour with a great deal of elegance, and to render it still more agreeable, the whole is lighted from without...
Page 2374 - ... from without, and the air within, being agitated by the flux and reflux of the tides, is perfectly dry and wholefome, free entirely from the damp vapours with which natural caverns in general abound.
Page 2285 - ... of both which sciences his knowledge was entirely confined to theory. Even physic was not without a charm to allure his imagination, and he would talk of Galen, Hippocrates, and Paracelsus, with all the confidence and familiarity of a modern empiric.
Page 2613 - Sennar, and from thence westward in the latitude and supposed direction of the Niger, I told him, that was the route, by which I was anxious that Africa might, if possible, be explored. He said, he should think himself singularly fortunate to be trusted with the adventure. I asked him when he would set out.
Page 2352 - She might be about twenty- four or five years of age, a time of life when the bloom of beauty has generally fled the cheek in India ; but...
Page 2442 - Martin's making his i : mediate efcape, and no creature fhould know from Mr. Wilkes how the affair happened. Upon this they parted ; but Mr. Martin came up again in two or three minutes to Mr. Wilkes, offering him a fecond time his affiftance ; but Mr.
Page 2357 - It is impossible, for there is but one in the world; that is in the Grand Signior's library at Constantinople, and is the seventh book on the second shelf on the right hand as you go in.
Page 2405 - ... merely by throwing open, for a moment, a door opening into some passage from whence fresh air may be had, and the upper part of a window; or by opening the upper part of one window, and the lower part of another.