The Lives and Portraits of Remarkable Characters, Drawn from the Most Authentic SourcesW. Lewis, 1819 |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 8
Página 5
... for his support : to the honor of the females of that time be it spoken , that the subscription raised was completely adequate to meet the wants of this good man , and was the CAPT CORAM . means of making his latter days glide.
... for his support : to the honor of the females of that time be it spoken , that the subscription raised was completely adequate to meet the wants of this good man , and was the CAPT CORAM . means of making his latter days glide.
Página 28
... meet , And others small - coal cry about the street ; Pity the poor prisoners , some with baskets go , And others cry come see my rara show : Anon , a poor wretch comes crying behind , With dog and bell , pray pity the poor blind ; Who ...
... meet , And others small - coal cry about the street ; Pity the poor prisoners , some with baskets go , And others cry come see my rara show : Anon , a poor wretch comes crying behind , With dog and bell , pray pity the poor blind ; Who ...
Página 40
... meet- ing , Masaniello gave surprising proofs of the obedience of the people to him : - " Now , " said he to the vice - roy , " see how my people obey me . " The people had assembled round the vice - roy's house , all was tumult and ...
... meet- ing , Masaniello gave surprising proofs of the obedience of the people to him : - " Now , " said he to the vice - roy , " see how my people obey me . " The people had assembled round the vice - roy's house , all was tumult and ...
Página 86
... meet his own cattle , which were coming to market from Thaydon Hall , a farm of his in Essex ! There would this same man , for- getful of the scenes he had just left , stand , in the cold or rain , bartering with a carcass - butcher for ...
... meet his own cattle , which were coming to market from Thaydon Hall , a farm of his in Essex ! There would this same man , for- getful of the scenes he had just left , stand , in the cold or rain , bartering with a carcass - butcher for ...
Página 125
... meet ; from this , their visits to each other became frequent . Jemmy was quite as great a miser as Dancer , but used not to go so shabbily dressed . - And here we leave them , sad instances of the weakness and insignificance of man ...
... meet ; from this , their visits to each other became frequent . Jemmy was quite as great a miser as Dancer , but used not to go so shabbily dressed . - And here we leave them , sad instances of the weakness and insignificance of man ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
The Lives and Portraits of Remarkable Characters, Drawn from the ..., Volume 1 Visualização integral - 1819 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
acquainted afterwards appeared Aram attended became Berkshire bones Braidwood called Clarke Colonel Timms cryes Dancer death dinner dock-yard dress early period EUGENE ARAM farmer fond FRANCIS GROSE frequently gentleman Grose heard hemp honor horse immediately John Elwes Jonathan Wild King Knaresborough lady Lambert lived lodgings London lord Lord Monboddo lordship Manasseh Ben Israel Marcham Masaniello master miles morning nature neighbour never Newmarket night o'clock obliged observed old Elwes parliament perfectly person Peter Poro portrait Portsmouth present received remarkably returned robbed Robert Powell rode seemed sent set fire shew shewn shilling Silas Deane sing singular Sir Harvey Sir Jeffrey SIR JEFFREY DUNSTAN Sir John Hotham soon Spurling streets supposed taken thing thought thousand pounds tion told took town tune Tyburn vice-roy walk whole woman
Passagens conhecidas
Página 14 - ... some attention; because, my lord, that any person, after a temperate use of life, a series of thinking and acting regularly, and without one single deviation from sobriety, should plunge into the very depth of profligacy precipitately and at once, is altogether improbable and unprecedented, and absolutely inconsistent with the course of things.
Página 48 - Some only for not being drown'd, And some for sitting above ground Whole days and nights, upon their breeches, And feeling pain, were hang'd for witches ; And some for putting knavish tricks Upon green geese and turkey-chicks, Or pigs that suddenly deceast Of griefs unnatural, as he guest ; Who after proved himself a witch, And made a rod for his own breech...
Página 14 - I find myself charged with the highest crime, with an enormity I am altogether incapable of; a fact, to the commission of which there goes far more insensibility of heart, more profligacy of morals, than ever fell to my lot ; and nothing possibly could have admitted a presumption of this nature but a depravity not inferior to that imputed to me. However, as I stand indicted at your lordship's bar, and have heard what is called evidence adduced in...
Página 15 - ... before, I had been confined to my bed, and suffered under a very long and severe disorder, and was not able, for half a year together, so much as to walk. The distemper left me indeed, yet slowly and in part ; but so macerated, so enfeebled, that I was reduced to crutches...
Página 20 - ... chance exposed ? And might not a place where bones lay be mentioned by a person by chance as well as found by a labourer by chance ? Or is it more criminal accidentally to name where bones lie, than accidentally to...
Página 19 - About the same time, and in another field, almost close to this borough, was discovered also, in searching for gravel, another human skeleton ; but the piety of the same worthy gentleman ordered both...
Página 17 - The place of their depositum, too, claims much more attention than is commonly bestowed upon it ; for of all places in the world, none could have mentioned any one wherein there was greater certainty of finding human bones than a hermitage, except he should point out a churchyard ; hermitages, in time past, being not only places of religious retirement, but of burial too...
Página 109 - but Mr. -, I have one thing to say to you — in my opinion my legs are not much hurt ; now you think they are— so I will make this agreement: I will take one leg, and you shall take the other; you shall do what you please with yours, and', I will do nothing to mine ; and I will wager your bill that my leg gets well the first.
Página 17 - ... being not only places of religious retirement, but of burial too. And it has scarce or never been heard of, but that every cell now known contains or contained these relics of humanity — some mutilated, and some entire.
Página 16 - Permit me next, my lord, to observe a little upon the bones which have been discovered. It is said (which, perhaps, is saying very far), that these are the skeleton of a man. It is possible, indeed, it may ; but is there any certain known criterion which incontestably distinguishes the sex in human bones.