Selected Short Stories of Sinclair LewisDoubleday, Doran & Company, 1837 - 426ÆäÀÌÁö |
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5 ÆäÀÌÁö
... served to hasten his own . On the thirty - first of May , 1716 , he was presented , by his friend and patron Archbishop King , to the vicarage of Finglass , a benefice worth about four hundred pounds a - year , in the diocese of Dublin ...
... served to hasten his own . On the thirty - first of May , 1716 , he was presented , by his friend and patron Archbishop King , to the vicarage of Finglass , a benefice worth about four hundred pounds a - year , in the diocese of Dublin ...
13 ÆäÀÌÁö
... serve for an annuity for my own time , though I leave nothing to pos- terity . you . « I beg our correspondence may be more frequent than it has been of late . I am sure my esteem and love for you never more deserved it from you , or ...
... serve for an annuity for my own time , though I leave nothing to pos- terity . you . « I beg our correspondence may be more frequent than it has been of late . I am sure my esteem and love for you never more deserved it from you , or ...
14 ÆäÀÌÁö
... served to give him a tem- porary relief ; they threw off the blame from himself , and laid upon fortune and accident a wretchedness of his own creating . But though this method of quarrelling in his poems with his situation , served to ...
... served to give him a tem- porary relief ; they threw off the blame from himself , and laid upon fortune and accident a wretchedness of his own creating . But though this method of quarrelling in his poems with his situation , served to ...
22 ÆäÀÌÁö
... serve to cement any society , and that could hardly be replaced when he was taken away . During the two or three last years of his life , he was more fond of company than ever , and could scarcely bear to be alone . The death of his ...
... serve to cement any society , and that could hardly be replaced when he was taken away . During the two or three last years of his life , he was more fond of company than ever , and could scarcely bear to be alone . The death of his ...
26 ÆäÀÌÁö
... serves to show what a master Parnell was of the Latin ; a copy of verses made in this manner , is one of the most difficult trifles that can possibly be imagined . I am assured that it was written upon the following occa- sion . Before ...
... serves to show what a master Parnell was of the Latin ; a copy of verses made in this manner , is one of the most difficult trifles that can possibly be imagined . I am assured that it was written upon the following occa- sion . Before ...
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acquainted admiration ¨¡neid agreeable Alcander amusement appearance Asem Battersea beauty began Bidderman called character comedy continued David Mallet David Rizzio death distress dress Duke Duke of Ormond Earl of Mar eloquence employed endeavoured enemy England English ESSAY excellent eyes fame favour fond fortune friends friendship gave genius gentleman give hand happiness Homer honour humour Iliad imagination imitation justice king knew labour lady language learning letters lived Lord Bolingbroke mankind manner means merit mind nature never obliged observed occasion once Parnell party passion perceive Pergolese perhaps person philosopher pleased pleasure poet poetry polite Pope possessed praise present Pretender Pretender's racter received resolved retired ridiculous Saracen says Scotland Scribblerus Club seemed seldom society soon superiour taste thing thought tion tories Virgil virtue VISCOUNT BOLINGBROKE whigs whole word writing Zoilus