Select British Classics, Band 25J. Conrad, 1803 |
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Seite 33
... woman to whom he offered his addresses , and profess- ed himself a lover ; when on a sudden we perceived this delicious walk to grow more narrow as we advanc- ed in it , till it ended in many intricate thickets , mazes and labyrinths ...
... woman to whom he offered his addresses , and profess- ed himself a lover ; when on a sudden we perceived this delicious walk to grow more narrow as we advanc- ed in it , till it ended in many intricate thickets , mazes and labyrinths ...
Seite 34
... woman that was following another , whose eye was fixed upon a fourth , that had her own game in view in some other quarter of the wilderness . I could not but ob- serve two things in this place which I thought very particular , that ...
... woman that was following another , whose eye was fixed upon a fourth , that had her own game in view in some other quarter of the wilderness . I could not but ob- serve two things in this place which I thought very particular , that ...
Seite 40
... woman , is to fall in with her humours , and by that means to let her see the absurdity of them , I proceeded accord- ingly : Pray , madam , said I , can you give me any methodical account of this illness , and how Cupid was first taken ...
... woman , is to fall in with her humours , and by that means to let her see the absurdity of them , I proceeded accord- ingly : Pray , madam , said I , can you give me any methodical account of this illness , and how Cupid was first taken ...
Seite 41
... woman smiled , as if she knew how ridiculous an errand she had been employed in ; and indeed I found by the sequel of her discourse , that she was an arch baggage , and of a cha- racter that is frequent enough in persons of her em ...
... woman smiled , as if she knew how ridiculous an errand she had been employed in ; and indeed I found by the sequel of her discourse , that she was an arch baggage , and of a cha- racter that is frequent enough in persons of her em ...
Seite 42
... woman , said I , I will by no means let you offend her , by staying on this message longer than is absolutely necessary , and so forced her cut . While I am studying to cure those evils and dis- tresses that are necessary or natural to ...
... woman , said I , I will by no means let you offend her , by staying on this message longer than is absolutely necessary , and so forced her cut . While I am studying to cure those evils and dis- tresses that are necessary or natural to ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquaintance admired agreeable Anticyra Apartment appear bag-pipes beautiful behaviour Bickerstaff called character Cicero confess death delight desire discourse dress entertain esteem eyes father favour February 27 fortune Gascon gentleman give Great-Britain greatest hand happy hath heart honour humble servant humour husband imagination impertinent Isaac Bickerstaff kind King of Sweden lady lately learned letter live look lover mankind manner marriage ment mind Nando's nation nature never night observe occasion OVID particular pass passion persons petitioner petticoat pleased pleasure poet present proper Pyrrha racter reader reason received Roman censors Rome says sense Sheer-lane shew sion soul speak spirit Stratonice Styx Tatler Telemachus tell temper Terentia thing thought THURSDAY Timoleon tion told town turn Ulysses upholsterer VIRG Virgil virtue walk whole wife woman words write young