ReminiscencesJ. Sharpe, 1819 - 166 pages |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 49
Page 23
... earl . Lady Howe was never publicly acknowledged as the king's daughter ; but princess Amelia treated her daughter Mrs. Howe * upon that foot , and one evening when I was present , gave her a ring with a small portrait of George I. with ...
... earl . Lady Howe was never publicly acknowledged as the king's daughter ; but princess Amelia treated her daughter Mrs. Howe * upon that foot , and one evening when I was present , gave her a ring with a small portrait of George I. with ...
Page 24
... earl of Macclesfield , the unna- tural mother of Savage the poet . Miss Brett was very handsome , but dark enough by her eyes , com- plexion , and hair , for a Spanish beauty . Abishag was lodged in the palace under the eyes of Bath ...
... earl of Macclesfield , the unna- tural mother of Savage the poet . Miss Brett was very handsome , but dark enough by her eyes , com- plexion , and hair , for a Spanish beauty . Abishag was lodged in the palace under the eyes of Bath ...
Page 27
... earls of Sunderland and Stanhope . The brothers - in - law , the viscount Townshend and Mr. Robert Walpole , adhered to the prince . Lord Sunderland is said to have too much resembled as a politician the earl his father , who was so ...
... earls of Sunderland and Stanhope . The brothers - in - law , the viscount Townshend and Mr. Robert Walpole , adhered to the prince . Lord Sunderland is said to have too much resembled as a politician the earl his father , who was so ...
Page 28
... Earl Stanhope was a man of strong and violent passions , and had dedicated himself to the army ; and was so far from thinking of any other line , that when Walpole , who first suggested the idea of ap- pointing him secretary of state ...
... Earl Stanhope was a man of strong and violent passions , and had dedicated himself to the army ; and was so far from thinking of any other line , that when Walpole , who first suggested the idea of ap- pointing him secretary of state ...
Page 30
... earl of Berkeley * , then , I think , first lord of the admiralty , to seize the prince of Wales , and convey him to America , whence he should never be heard of more . This detestable project , copied probably from the earl of Fal ...
... earl of Berkeley * , then , I think , first lord of the admiralty , to seize the prince of Wales , and convey him to America , whence he should never be heard of more . This detestable project , copied probably from the earl of Fal ...
Common terms and phrases
acquaintance afterwards anecdotes answered asked beautiful believe bishop Bolinbroke called castle character Chesterfield countess countess of Suffolk court D'Alembert daughter DAVID HUME dear sir death dinner duchess of Kendal duchess of Marlborough duke earl England father favour France French friends gentleman George give grace hand Hanover heard honour HORACE WALPOLE Howard humble servant Hume humour James's king of Prussia king's lady Suffolk letter lived lord lord Hervey lordship Louis XIV madame du Deffand majesty Marlborough married Mary mention minister mistress morning mother never obliged Paris passion person portrait Prince of Conti prince of Wales princess printed quarrel queen Caroline reign Reminiscences replied ridicule Rousseau royal sent Sir Robert Walpole soon Strawberry-hill suppose taste tell thing thought tion told vanity Voltaire Whig wife wish woman writing wrote
Popular passages
Page 159 - You know, in England, we read their works, but seldom or never take any notice of authors. We think them sufficiently paid if their books sell, and, of course, leave them to their colleges and obscurity, by which means we are not troubled with their vanity and impertinence.
Page 16 - Dorothea*, only child of the duke of Zell; a match of convenience to reunite the dominions of the family. Though she was very handsome, the prince, who was extremely amorous, had several mistresses ; which provocation, and his absence in the army of the confederates, probably disposed the princess to indulge some degree of coquetry. At that moment arrived at Hanover the famous and beautiful count Konisraarkf, the charms of whose person ought not to have obliterated the memory of his vile assassination...
Page 153 - I guessed that your friends consulted your interest less than their own inclination to expose Rousseau; and I think their omission of what I said on that subject proves I was not mistaken in my guess. My letter hinted, too, my contempt of learned men and their miserable conduct Since I was to appear in print, I should not have been sorry that that opinion should have appeared at the same time. In truth, there is nothing I hold so cheap as the generality of learned men ; and I have often thought that...
Page 149 - I not only suppressed the letter while you stayed there, out of delicacy to you, but it was the reason why, out of delicacy to myself, I did not go to see him as you often proposed to me, thinking it wrong to go and make a cordial visit to a man, with a letter in my pocket to laugh at him.
Page 24 - I. when his son the Prince of Wales and the Princess had quitted St. James's on their quarrel with him, had kept back their three eldest daughters, who lived with him to his death, even after there had outwardly been a reconciliation between the King and Prince.
Page 71 - Lady Sundon had received a pair of diamond ear-rings as a bribe for procuring a considerable post in Queen Caroline's family for a certain peer ; ' and, decked with those jewels, paid a visit to the old Duchess ; who, as soon as she was gone, said, " What an impudent creature, to come hither with her bribe in her ear ! "
Page 69 - He had good sense, infinite generosity, and not more economy than was to be expected from a young man of warm passions and such vast expectations. He was modest and diffident too, but could not digest total dependence on a capricious and avaricious grandmother. His sister (Lady Bateman) had the intriguing spirit of her father and grandfather, Earls of Sunderland. She was connected with Henry Fox, the first Lord Holland, and both had great influence over the [second] Duke of Marlborough.
Page 42 - Twelfth-night at court, had won so large a sum of money, that he thought it imprudent to carry it home in the dark, and deposited it with the mistress. Thence the queen inferred great intimacy, and thenceforwards Lord Chesterfield could obtain no favour from court: and finding himself desperate, went into opposition.
Page 157 - ... believed the quintessence of truth ; that they always acted without prejudice and respect of persons. Indeed, we know that the ancient philosophers were a ridiculous composition of arrogance, disputation, and contradictions; that some of them acted against all ideas of decency; that others affected to doubt of their own senses; that some, for venting unintelligible nonsense, pretended to think themselves superior to kings; that they gave themselves airs of accounting for all that we do and do...
Page 27 - Wales was even left regent ; but never being trusted afterwards with that dignity on like occasions, it is probable that the son discovered too much fondness for acting the king, or that the father conceived a jealousy of his having done so. Sure it is, that on the king's return great divisions arose in the court ; and the Whigs were divided — some devoting themselves to the wearer of the crown, and others to the expectant.