Edinburgh Fugitive Pieces |
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Edinburgh Fugitive Pieces With Letters, Containing a Comparative View of ... William Creech Visos knygos peržiūra - 1815 |
Edinburgh Fugitive Pieces With Letters, Containing a Comparative View of ... William Creech Peržiūra negalima - 2019 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
addreſs againſt allowed alſo appear attend beautiful become beſt called Captain character Club conduct duty Edinburgh eyes families faſhion father feel female firſt friends gentlemen give given head heart himſelf honour hope hour houſe human keep kind ladies laſt late letter live look Lord Manly manners maſter means meeting mind Miniſters moral moſt muſt nature never night obſerved occaſion opinion parents perhaps period perſon pleaſe poor preſent principles received religion reſpect ſaid ſame ſay Scotland ſee ſenſe ſhall ſhe ſhort ſhould SITY ſociety ſome ſtate ſubject ſuch Sunday taken tell theſe thing thoſe thought tion town UNIV uſeful vice virtue whole whoſe wiſh woman women write young
Populiarios ištraukos
183 psl. - Delightful task! to rear the tender thought, To teach the young idea how to shoot...
45 psl. - A ftranger may be accommodated not only comfortably, but moft elegantly, at many public hotels ; and the perfon who in 1763 was obliged to put up with accommodation little better than that of a waggoner or carrier, may now be lodged like a prince, and command every luxury of life His guinea, it muft be owned, will not go quite fo far as it did in 1763.
116 psl. - ... errors, and are firmly refolved to be more on our guard in time coming. In fhort, Sunday is only a day of reft, from worldly concerns, in order to be more ufefully employed upon thofe that are internal. Sunday accordingly is a day of account ; and a candid account every " cipiamus innocentiae voluntatem, et ab omni nos labe de" lictorum omnium amputatione purgemus.
132 psl. - Ask where's the North? at York, 'tis on the Tweed; In Scotland, at the Orcades; and there, At Greenland, Zembla, or the Lord knows where.
37 psl. - My soul shrunk back, and wish'd to be no more. Of eye undaunted and of touch impure, Old ere of age, worn out when scarce mature ; Daily debas'd to...
56 psl. - School, there were lat-ly twenty-fcven houfes of bad fame. The boys are daily accuftomed to hear language, and to fee manners, that early corrupt their young minds. Many of them, before they enter their teens, boaft of gallantries and intrigues \vhich their parents little think of.
61 psl. - In 1703," says this observer, " a young man was termed a fine fellow, who, to a well-informed and accomplished mind added elegance of manners, and a conduct guided by principle ; one who would not have injured the rights of the meanest individual...
41 psl. - The value of literary property was carried higher by the Scots than ever was known among any people.
40 psl. - There are four or five ft.ige coaches to Leith every half hour, and they run it in 15 or 20 minutes DUNN, who now has the magnificent hotels in the New Town, was alfo the...
178 psl. - Train up a child in the way he fhould go ; and when he is old, he will not depart from it.