Repository of Arts, Literature, Fashions &cR. Ackermann ... Sherwood & Company and Walker & Company ... and Simpkin & Marshall, 1817 |
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Side 4
... become so distinguished an ornament . On seeing Mr. Kem- ble and Mrs. Siddons in tragedy , he returned to France in 1786 , and began to apply himself to surgery as his future profession ; but his predominant passion still carrying him ...
... become so distinguished an ornament . On seeing Mr. Kem- ble and Mrs. Siddons in tragedy , he returned to France in 1786 , and began to apply himself to surgery as his future profession ; but his predominant passion still carrying him ...
Side 9
... become of Nismes had the Romans been so suscepti- ble to colds as I am ! December 21 . To - day , in the warmth of a fine spring morning , I reached my vil- lage , which is named Caverac , and is only about six miles distant from the ...
... become of Nismes had the Romans been so suscepti- ble to colds as I am ! December 21 . To - day , in the warmth of a fine spring morning , I reached my vil- lage , which is named Caverac , and is only about six miles distant from the ...
Side 11
... become crazy , which we can erect again for a tri- fle when they tumble down , and which are inhabited by a hearty robust race , who grow gray under their roofs . " too . We had not recovered our spirits till we had walked through the ...
... become crazy , which we can erect again for a tri- fle when they tumble down , and which are inhabited by a hearty robust race , who grow gray under their roofs . " too . We had not recovered our spirits till we had walked through the ...
Side 13
... becoming some- thing like what they were designed to be , the tempest of tongues sub- sided in hollow murmurs . Our machinery , decorations , and pro- · at best cold and comfortless . But after a dish THE AMATEUR'S ROUT . 13.
... becoming some- thing like what they were designed to be , the tempest of tongues sub- sided in hollow murmurs . Our machinery , decorations , and pro- · at best cold and comfortless . But after a dish THE AMATEUR'S ROUT . 13.
Side 20
... become one . " " I am surprised to hear you say so , " replied the marquis , " for I thought Veronique and Felicie were intimate ; and independent of your daughter's friendship for me , I supposed she would rejoice in promoting the ...
... become one . " " I am surprised to hear you say so , " replied the marquis , " for I thought Veronique and Felicie were intimate ; and independent of your daughter's friendship for me , I supposed she would rejoice in promoting the ...
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Abdallah Albert Durer appear arms Aspasia Azan Bastian Beatrice beauty black crape bosom cambric Cassander charms child Civilis colour composed cottage countess crape cried Crito crown dear dinner dress dress Duke Duke of York elegant eyes fancy fashionable father favour favourite feelings female finished flounce French front give hand happiness heart honour hope Ilzaide lace lady look Lord Madame Madame de Genlis manner Margot Massouf melody ment mind Mirvan Moncey morning morning dress mourning muslin nature neral ness never O'Hara ornamented passion Piano-Forte plain play pleasure present Prince Prince Regent Princess promenade quinquina racter rendered REPOSITORY ribbon round Royal Highness shew side silk sleeve soon style taste TATTLER thee ther thing thou thought tion trimmed truth ture vice-queen viceroy virtue white satin whole wine worn Ximeo young Zuma
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Side 185 - Oh ! there are looks and tones that dart An instant sunshine through the heart, — As if the soul that minute caught Some treasure it through life had sought...
Side 238 - I, and held a lucrative office in the ' court of wards,' till that singular court was abolished at the time of the restoration. In his own times he was called ' The great Audley,'* an epithet so often abused, and here applied to the creation of enormous wealth. But there are minds of great capacity, concealed by the nature of their pursuits ; and the wealth of AUDLEY may be considered as the cloudy medium through which a bright genius shone, of which, had it been thrown into a nobler sphere of action,...
Side 240 - Hence he considered marriage, with a modern political economist, as very dangerous; bitterly censuring the clergy, whose children, he said, never thrived, and whose widows were left destitute. An apostolical life, according to...
Side 185 - A gem away, that thou hadst sworn Should ever in thy heart be worn. Come, if the love thou hast for me Is pure and fresh as mine for thee, — Fresh as the fountain under ground, When first 'tis by the lapwing found...
Side 280 - OUR sight is the most perfect and most delightful of all our senses. It fills the mind with the largest variety of ideas, converses with its objects at the greatest distance, and continues the longest in action without being tired or satiated with its proper enjoyments.
Side 91 - ... deformity, Affectation; it will produce the grin, the simper, the stare, the languish, the pout, and innumerable other grimaces, that render folly ridiculous, and change pity to contempt. By...
Side 307 - Foes to light-heart jollity : May no winds careering high Drive the clouds along the sky, But may all nature smile with aspect boon, When in the heavens thou show'st thy face, oh Harvest Moon!
Side 170 - It was dusk, when two squadrons of Prussian cavalry, both of them two deep, passed over me in full trot, lifting me from the ground, and tumbling me about cruelly : the clatter of their approach, and the apprehensions it EXTRAORDINARY PRESERVATION OF COLONEL PONSONIJY.
Side 92 - The love of reason and of virtue is mingled with the love of beauty; because this beauty is little more than the emanation of intellectual excellence, which is not an object of corporeal appetite. As it excites a purer passion, it also more forcibly engages to fidelity: every man finds himself more powerfully restrained from giving pain to goodness than to beauty; and every look of a countenance in which they are blended, in which beauty is the expression of goodness, is a silent reproach...
Side 91 - It has been remarked that the predominant passion may generally be discovered in the countenance ; because the muscles by which it is expressed, being almost perpetually contracted, lose their tone, and never totally relax ; so that the expression remains when the passion is suspended ; thus, an angry, a disdainful, a subtle, and a suspicious temper, is displayed in characters that are almost universally understood. It is equally true of the pleasing and the softer passions, that they leave their...