The Miscellaneous Works of Oliver Goldsmith, with an Account of His Life and Writings, Volume 1A. and W. Galignani, 1825 |
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Página xiii
... seemed , when Oliver after- wards recounted to him all the circumstances that had taken place , to be more amused than surprised at the detail . In the house of this new friend Goldsmith experienced the most hospitable entertainment for ...
... seemed , when Oliver after- wards recounted to him all the circumstances that had taken place , to be more amused than surprised at the detail . In the house of this new friend Goldsmith experienced the most hospitable entertainment for ...
Página xxi
... seemed grateful for my advice , and promised for the future strictly to adhere to it . " The votary of play , however , is never to be so easily cured . Reason and ridicule are equally impotent against that unhappy passion . To those ...
... seemed grateful for my advice , and promised for the future strictly to adhere to it . " The votary of play , however , is never to be so easily cured . Reason and ridicule are equally impotent against that unhappy passion . To those ...
Página xxvii
... seemed to be gall and wormwood to him ; and how keenly he must have felt its mortification and misery , may be gathered from the satire with which it is designated in various parts of his works . The language which he has put into the ...
... seemed to be gall and wormwood to him ; and how keenly he must have felt its mortification and misery , may be gathered from the satire with which it is designated in various parts of his works . The language which he has put into the ...
Página xlvi
... seemed sometimes , as it were , to look up to the great moralist , but it was rather with affection than with dread , more with the spirit of emulation than the despair of equal excellence . And , on the other hand , in no single ...
... seemed sometimes , as it were , to look up to the great moralist , but it was rather with affection than with dread , more with the spirit of emulation than the despair of equal excellence . And , on the other hand , in no single ...
Página lxiv
... seemed rather displeased ; but Sir Joshua thought Goldsmith in the right , observing , that « where people have lived a great deal together , they know what each of them will say on every subject . A new understanding , therefore , is ...
... seemed rather displeased ; but Sir Joshua thought Goldsmith in the right , observing , that « where people have lived a great deal together , they know what each of them will say on every subject . A new understanding , therefore , is ...
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acquainted amusement appeared Ballymahon beauty bookseller Boswell Burchell called catgut character child circumstances contempt continued conversation cried my wife daugh daughter dear diocese of Elphin Dr Johnson Edmund Burke entertained fame favour Flamborough fortune friends friendship gave genius gentleman girls give going Goldsmith happy heart Heaven honour humour Jenkinson labours ladies laugh letter literary live Livy look madam Manetho manner ment merit mind morning Moses nature neighbour never night observed occasion Oliver Oliver Goldsmith Olivia once opinion passion perceived perhaps pleased pleasure poem poet polite learning poor pounds present prison R. B. Sheridan replied rest returned seemed Sir Joshua Sir Joshua Reynolds Sir William soon Sophia Squire Stoops to Conquer sure taste thing Thornhill thought tion took Traveller turn Vicar of Wakefield virtue wretched write young