The Miscellaneous Works of Oliver GoldsmithMacmillan, 1893 - 695 páginas |
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Página lvi
... thousand acres of additional ditch - work and compi- lation , for some bookseller who would not mind prepaying for the labour in part . He did talk of something of the kind to the publisher Nourse , into whose hands the property of the ...
... thousand acres of additional ditch - work and compi- lation , for some bookseller who would not mind prepaying for the labour in part . He did talk of something of the kind to the publisher Nourse , into whose hands the property of the ...
Página lxiv
... thousand pounds . Our second child , a girl , I intended to call after her aunt Grissel ; but my wife , who during her pregnancy had been reading romances , insisted upon her being called Olivia . In less than another year we had ...
... thousand pounds . Our second child , a girl , I intended to call after her aunt Grissel ; but my wife , who during her pregnancy had been reading romances , insisted upon her being called Olivia . In less than another year we had ...
Página 3
... thousand pounds we had but four hundred remaining . My chief attention , therefore , was now to bring down the pride of my family to their cir- cumstances ; for I well knew that aspiring beggary is wretchedness itself . " You cannot be ...
... thousand pounds we had but four hundred remaining . My chief attention , therefore , was now to bring down the pride of my family to their cir- cumstances ; for I well knew that aspiring beggary is wretchedness itself . " You cannot be ...
Página 8
... thousand pound prize in the lottery , and we sat down with a blank . " I protest , Charles , " cried my wife , " this is the way you always damp my girls and me when we are in spirits . Tell me , Sophy , my dear , what do you think of ...
... thousand pound prize in the lottery , and we sat down with a blank . " I protest , Charles , " cried my wife , " this is the way you always damp my girls and me when we are in spirits . Tell me , Sophy , my dear , what do you think of ...
Página 14
... thousand vicious thoughts , which arise without his power to suppress . Thinking freely of re- ligion may be involuntary with this gentle- man ; so that , allowing his sentiments to be wrong , yet , as he is purely passive in his assent ...
... thousand vicious thoughts , which arise without his power to suppress . Thinking freely of re- ligion may be involuntary with this gentle- man ; so that , allowing his sentiments to be wrong , yet , as he is purely passive in his assent ...
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Outras edições - Ver todos
The miscellaneous works of OLiver Goldsmith [ed. by S. Rose]. Oliver Goldsmith Visualização completa - 1812 |
Termos e frases comuns
acquainted admiration Æneid Æsop amusement appeared Asem beauty Burchell called ceremony character China Chinese Circassia companion continued cried daugh daughter dear desire distress dressed endeavour England English entertainment expected eyes fancy favour Flamborough fond fortune Fum Hoam genius gentleman give going Goldsmith hand happiness heart Heaven honour Johnson king lady laugh learning LETTER Lien Chi Altangi live Livy look mandarine Manetho mankind manner marriage Mencius ment merit mind misery nature neighbours never night obliged observed occasion Oliver Goldsmith once passion Pekin perceive philosopher pity pleased pleasure poet polite poor possessed praise present racter rapture replied republic of letters resolved returned scarce seemed soon Squire Stoops to Conquer stranger sure talk taste things Thornhill thought tion traveller turn venison Vicar of Wakefield virtue whole wife wretched write young