Beauchamp; or The wheel of fortune, Bind 1–2 |
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afforded arrived Arthur attendance baronet bert blessings bookseller bubble and squeak butler called carriage champ CHAPTER child comfort companion conduct cried D'Unrof daugh dear declared desire disposition donkey door endeavoured ERPINGHAM expected expences eyes father favour fear feel felt Fingerbribe fortune GEORGE MARSHALL Gertrude's godfather Godfrey hand happy head heart honourable Charles Fitz-Eustace hope hour husband instantly lady Beau lady Beauchamp lady Earlingbury lady Thirfield ladyship Lawrence leave Lincolnshire little Gertrude London look lord Thirfield Loughton marriage Marshall Matilda matter means ment mind misery morning mother never object old gentleman pain party passed person pleasure poor possession present proceeded racter reader recollection rienced satisfied seat Simp Simpson sion sir Charles sir Herbert Beauchamp Sloth soon spect suffer sufficient ther thing thought thur tion took Underproof vols WHEEL OF FORTUNE wife
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Side 189 - Noble madam, Men's evil manners live in brass; their virtues We write in water.
Side 236 - Tales of the Passions, by G. Moore, second edition, 8vo. 0 10 6 Vaults of Lepanto, a Romance, by TR Tuckett, Esq. 3 vols ................ 0 15 0 Midnight Weddings, by Mrs. Meeke, second edition, 3 vols...
Side 54 - We only perceived we were going westward, and at daylight in the morning we found ourselves at Trenton, which we had left two days before. From the badness of the road, the darkness of the night, and accidents to the artillery carriages, or the falling of a horse, &c., we thus consumed the whole night in the march. We quartered in the houses occupied by the Hessians the week before. We had kindled our fires, and got on our kettles, and were collecting from our knapsacks or pockets, a stray remnant...
Side 236 - Hofland 0 40 The Sisters, by the same Author 0 40 Visit to London, or Emily and her Friends, by the same Author, 4 vols' 1 40 The Irishmen, a Military Political Novel, by a Native Officer, * vob u 9 <i Infatuation, by Mrs.
Side 3 - We are a simple individual, as the reader may perceive, by simply looking to the titlepage of our book, whose innate diffidence would have led us to remain in obscurity, had not our bookseller urged, that a thing •without a name was little better than no thing at all.
Side 7 - Be it known then, that we have commenced the writing of this our book, on the seventh day of November, in the year 1816, which is certainly the most gloomy month in the most gloomy year we ever remember to have seen.
Side 12 - ... being narrated by the master. While Livy, again, is being studied, Curtius's " Life of Alexander the Great " might be read in the same way. While Horace is being critically and exactly studied, much of Ovid might be cursively read. I would also encourage, for cursive and private reading, editions with the Latin or Greek on one side and the English on the other. In short, every means should be taken to make the boy familiar with a large mass of the language and literature which he is studying....
Side 61 - President, but if his fellow citizens chose to elect him he would serve them to the best of his ability.
Side 237 - IN FOUR VOLUMES. BY JAMES HOLROYD FIELDING, EDITOR OF "SOME ACCOUNT OF MYSELF, BY CHARLES EARL OF EHPINGHAM,
Side 236 - Visit to London, or Emily and her Friends, by the same Author, 4 vols ................ 1 40 Prison-House, or the World we live in, by Mrs.