The Spectator: With Notes and a General Index, Volume 1J.J. Woodward, 1836 - 1 pages |
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Page xi
... received from your administration , would be a more proper work for a history , than for an address of this nature . Your lordship appears as great in your private life , as in the most important offices which you have borne . I would ...
... received from your administration , would be a more proper work for a history , than for an address of this nature . Your lordship appears as great in your private life , as in the most important offices which you have borne . I would ...
Page 22
... received as a present from Ĉolus . The great heaps of gold on either side of the throne , now appeared to be only heaps of paper , or little piles of notched sticks , bound up together in bun- dles , like Bath faggots . Whilst I was ...
... received as a present from Ĉolus . The great heaps of gold on either side of the throne , now appeared to be only heaps of paper , or little piles of notched sticks , bound up together in bun- dles , like Bath faggots . Whilst I was ...
Page 28
... received another upon the same subject ; which , by the date and style of it , I take to be written by some young templar : ' SIR , " I am no less acquainted with the par- Middle Temple , 1710-11 . ticular quarters and regions of this ...
... received another upon the same subject ; which , by the date and style of it , I take to be written by some young templar : ' SIR , " I am no less acquainted with the par- Middle Temple , 1710-11 . ticular quarters and regions of this ...
Page 36
... received rules of the drama . Besides , this is what is prac- tised every day in Westminster - hall , where nothing is more usual than to see a couple of lawyers , who have been tearing each other to pieces in the court , embracing one ...
... received rules of the drama . Besides , this is what is prac- tised every day in Westminster - hall , where nothing is more usual than to see a couple of lawyers , who have been tearing each other to pieces in the court , embracing one ...
Page 38
... received the addresses of a gentle- the first place from the enjoyment of one's man , whom , after a long and intimate ac- self ; and in the next , from the friendship quaintance , she forsook , upon the account and conversation of a ...
... received the addresses of a gentle- the first place from the enjoyment of one's man , whom , after a long and intimate ac- self ; and in the next , from the friendship quaintance , she forsook , upon the account and conversation of a ...
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