The liberal critic; or, Memoirs of Henry Percy, Volume 31812 |
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Page 26
... replied Henry , with a tear glistening in his eye , " I see you are pleased to divert yourself at the expence of your unhappy son . But you must forgive my plainness in saying that you do not know the lady , if you think that any other ...
... replied Henry , with a tear glistening in his eye , " I see you are pleased to divert yourself at the expence of your unhappy son . But you must forgive my plainness in saying that you do not know the lady , if you think that any other ...
Page 31
... replied with a sudden and wounded sensibility- ' What , Madam , after his conduct in London , would you have me suppose that he ever entertained for me the smallest particle of respect and love ? This question was followed by an ...
... replied with a sudden and wounded sensibility- ' What , Madam , after his conduct in London , would you have me suppose that he ever entertained for me the smallest particle of respect and love ? This question was followed by an ...
Page 36
... replied Mrs. Percy ; " I shall explain to you such mo tives as must ultimately make you both bappy and satisfied . I have proved to you that you were loved , dearly loved , because I knew that the ambition of your heart would never have ...
... replied Mrs. Percy ; " I shall explain to you such mo tives as must ultimately make you both bappy and satisfied . I have proved to you that you were loved , dearly loved , because I knew that the ambition of your heart would never have ...
Page 46
... replied Mrs. Percy , " the gentlemen who are here languishing under the despised drudgery of the curacies , are most of them men of family , and supreme literary merit . There is the Rev. Dr. Oak for one ; I know him well ; son of fair ...
... replied Mrs. Percy , " the gentlemen who are here languishing under the despised drudgery of the curacies , are most of them men of family , and supreme literary merit . There is the Rev. Dr. Oak for one ; I know him well ; son of fair ...
Page 58
... replied Mrs. Percy ; " a man of ho- nour , whose conscience has nothing to re- proach him , when he is unjustly treated , mo- destly rests satisfied with the testimony of his own heart , compensating himself in the pleasures of ...
... replied Mrs. Percy ; " a man of ho- nour , whose conscience has nothing to re- proach him , when he is unjustly treated , mo- destly rests satisfied with the testimony of his own heart , compensating himself in the pleasures of ...
Common terms and phrases
acquaintance Adam and Eve admiration affection amiable amusements appear attention Bardolph Bath beauty CHAP character choly church Clara Clara Williams Cleora clergy conduct considered contempt continued Henry conversation convinced curates danger dare delight divine ductile enjoy entertain esteem exclaimed eyes fear feel felicity folly fortune Foundling Hospital friends George Fox girls happiness heart Heaven HENRY PERCY Henry's honour hopes human husband licentious live long courtship look Madam manner marriage married means meet melan ment merit mind Miss Millwood moral mother nature ness never opinion passion Percy person pleasure political poverty pride pride and prejudice principles profession pump-room Quakers quired racter rectors religion religious replied reproaches riage rienced ruin Satirist sense shew sion Sir Harry Sir John society spirit Tartuffe taste tender thing thought tion town ture vice virtue Whitecliffe wife woman women
Popular passages
Page 262 - Awake : The morning shines, and the fresh field Calls us ; we lose the prime, to mark how spring Our tender plants, how blows the citron grove, What drops the myrrh, and what the balmy reed, How nature paints her colours, how the bee Sits on the bloom extracting liquid sweet.
Page 291 - THIS is the last letter you will ever receive from me, the last assurance I shall give you on earth, of a sincere and...
Page 246 - The heart proves to be only the inert receptacle of the blood, and thofe grofler fpirits which ferve for the animal function : but the pocket is fraught with thofe finer and more fublime fpirits which confiitute the wit, and many other diftinguifhing characters.
Page 292 - ... calmly resign your breath, and enter the confines of unmolested joy. — I am now taking my farewell of you here; but it is a short adieu, with full persuasion that we shall soon meet again.
Page 287 - Towns and cities, like Jericho, without any miracle have fallen flat before it ; it has ftopp'd the mouths of cannons, and more furprizing ftill, of faction and flander.
Page 300 - For feme time after the celebration of the nuptials, they entertained a reciprocal affection. She was all fondnefs, he all indulgence. But their intimacy, inftead of increafing, dimini'fhed their regard. Her beauty, the more it was familiar to his eye, grew lefs attractive to his heart; and his converfation grew lefs engaging, the more fhe partook of the natural levity of her fex.
Page 292 - ... magnify thee. What a dream is mortal life ! What shadows are all the objects of mortal sense ! all the glories of mortality (my much beloved friend) will be nothing in your view at the awful hour of death, when you must be separated from this lower creation, and enter on the borders of the immortal world. Something persuades me this will be the last farewell in this world; Heaven forbid it should be an everlasting parting : may that divine protection, whose care I io>plore, keep you stedfast...
Page 292 - Gentiles trust, in whom all the families of the earth are blessed, is now my glorious, my unfailing confidence ; in His merits alone I expect to stand justified before infinite purity and justice. How poor were my hopes if I depended on those works which my own...
Page 248 - I have remarked a pfyftcian in the chamber of a wealthy patient, clear up his countenance, and write his recipe with infinite vivacity and good humour ; but in the abode »3» SYMfATHY BETWEEN THE BREECHES-POCKET, &C.