Selected English Letters (XV-XIX Centuries)Mabel Duckitt H. Milford, Oxford University Press, 1913 - 460 páginas |
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Página 56
... give , which is the same thing : and then you would see whether I should not with much more willingness attend you in a retirement , whenever you please to give me leave , than ever I did at London or Windsor . From these sentiments I ...
... give , which is the same thing : and then you would see whether I should not with much more willingness attend you in a retirement , whenever you please to give me leave , than ever I did at London or Windsor . From these sentiments I ...
Página 74
... give of it , though all agree in liking it extremely . It is generally said that you are the author ; but I am told the bookseller declares , he knows not from what hand it came . From the highest to the lowest it is universally read ...
... give of it , though all agree in liking it extremely . It is generally said that you are the author ; but I am told the bookseller declares , he knows not from what hand it came . From the highest to the lowest it is universally read ...
Página 164
... give you all the trouble I would have done . The description of a road , which your coach wheels have so often honoured , it would be needless to give you ; suffice it that I arrived safe at my uncle's , who is a great hunter in ...
... give you all the trouble I would have done . The description of a road , which your coach wheels have so often honoured , it would be needless to give you ; suffice it that I arrived safe at my uncle's , who is a great hunter in ...
Índice
SIR THOMAS MORE 14781535 | 1 |
FRANCIS BACON 15611626 | 8 |
JOHN EVELYN 16201706 | 19 |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
Abbotsford acquaintance Adieu admiration agreeable Anne Brontë assure Ballitore beauty believe bless character charming Coleridge DEAR SIR delight desire dressed Dunciad E. V. LUCAS Edmund Burke Emily Brontë England English eyes father favour fear feel Felpham GEORGE CRABBE give hand happy head hear heard heart honour hope humour imagine janissaries kind knew Lady laugh least letter live London look Lord Lord Byron madam MANCHESTER ATHENAEUM manner MARGARET ROPER MARY LEADBEATER mind Miss morning nature never night obliged opinion passed passion PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY perhaps person pleased pleasure poem poet poetry poor pray present reason received remember seems seen sense Skiddaw sort speak spirit suppose sure talk tell thank THEODORE WATTS-DUNTON things thought tion told town volume walk whole wife wish woman word write