Sketches from Life, Volume 1H. Colburn, 1846 |
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Page 13
... questions it , it is manifestly a fiction ; if it passes cur- rent , it is almost sure to be a counterfeit . The course of truth never yet ran smooth . There is an instinct that leads a listener to be very sparing of credence when a ...
... questions it , it is manifestly a fiction ; if it passes cur- rent , it is almost sure to be a counterfeit . The course of truth never yet ran smooth . There is an instinct that leads a listener to be very sparing of credence when a ...
Page 19
... question never got further than Canterbury : moreover , they never so much as hinted that her ladyship and the colonel started off at eleven at night , for they well knew the hour to be nine . In a like spirit they had refused to give ...
... question never got further than Canterbury : moreover , they never so much as hinted that her ladyship and the colonel started off at eleven at night , for they well knew the hour to be nine . In a like spirit they had refused to give ...
Page 22
... question whether women had souls ; but that men , by whom the question was modestly mooted , had minds - each male creature having a whole one to his own share — was never dis- puted for an instant . Yet this , like other indubitable ...
... question whether women had souls ; but that men , by whom the question was modestly mooted , had minds - each male creature having a whole one to his own share — was never dis- puted for an instant . Yet this , like other indubitable ...
Page 32
... question , that his father was a blab , and could never keep his own counsel . The only facts in favour of the doctrine , " like father like son , " that occur to us , are to be found in the peerage . There we see it clearly ...
... question , that his father was a blab , and could never keep his own counsel . The only facts in favour of the doctrine , " like father like son , " that occur to us , are to be found in the peerage . There we see it clearly ...
Page 44
... question of results , but not the question of means ; and finds it more to its interest as well as to its convenience to decide , that people won't do , than that things can't be done . Men must rarely expect to get credit for ...
... question of results , but not the question of means ; and finds it more to its interest as well as to its convenience to decide , that people won't do , than that things can't be done . Men must rarely expect to get credit for ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acontius acquaintance admirable advice affectation beauty bird called character Charles Lamb charm conscience consider creature Cydippe DANIEL MACLISE dead certainty dear debtor's prison dining dinner Et-cetera eyes fact fancy FATHER LIKE SON faults feathers feel fire fool foremost dog fortunate genius gentleman GEORGE CRUIKSHANK give habit hand happen head hear heart honour hope horsewhipped hour human imagination immortal bard jury Laman Blanchard lative least less letters live long day Long Parliament longest day look Lyddie ment mind miserable moral morning nature never night once party pass perhaps persons philosopher plain-dealing poet poetry principle secret seemed Shakspeare side society soul speak speech spirit supposed sure sweet taste tell there's thing thought thousand tion tongue trial by jury truth turn utter verdict virtue volume whisper wisdom words wretched
Popular passages
Page 82 - And thy arch and wily ways, And thy store of other praise. Blithe of heart, from week to week Thou dost play at hide-and-seek ; While the patient primrose sits...
Page 105 - Oh ! that I were The viewless spirit of a lovely sound, A living voice, a breathing harmony, A bodiless enjoyment, born and dying With the blest Tone that made me.
Page xxxii - His thoughts were as a pyramid up-piled, On whose far top an angel stood and smiled — Yet, in his heart, was he a simple child.
Page xii - ... and colonial appointments, can reward his services and prevent his starving. But for the author there is nothing but his pen, till that and life are worn to the stump ; and then, with good fortune, perhaps on his death-bed he receives a pension — and equals, it may be, for a few months, the income of a retired butler...
Page xxxi - Added to this, they contain not a thought, not a line, from which the most anxious parent would guard his child. They may be read with safety by the most simple, and yet they contain enough of truth and character to interest the most reflective.
Page xxxi - HE taught the cheerfulness that still is ours The sweetness that still lurks in human powers; If heaven be full of stars, the earth has flowers. His was the searching thought, the glowing mind; The gentle will, to others soon resigned; But, more than all, the feeling just and kind. His pleasures were as melodies from reeds — Sweet books, deep music and unselfish deeds. Finding immortal flowers in human weeds. True to his kind, nor of himself afraid, He...
Page xii - And so, on the sudden loss of the situation in which he had frittered away his higher and more delicate genius, in all the drudgery that a party exacts from its defender of the press, Laman Blanchard was thrown again upon the world, to shift as he might, and subsist as he could. His practice in periodical writing was now considerable ; his versatility was extreme. He was marked by publishers and editors as a useful contributor, and so his livelihood was secure. From a variety of sources thus he contrived,...
Page ix - EVENING. ALREADY hath the day grown grey with age ; And in the west, like to a conqueror crowned, Is faint with too much glory. On the ground He flings his dazzling arms ; and, as a sage, Prepares him for a cloud-hung hermitage, Where Meditation meets him at the door ; And all around — on wall, and roof, and floor, Some pensive star unfolds its silver page Of truth, which God's own hand hath testified. Sweet Eve...