Life and Manners: From The Autobiography of an English Opium-eaterTicknor, Reed, and Fields, 1851 - 347 sider |
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Side 30
... gentlemen , one of whom has since published interesting memoirs , had been students in Oxford , and had many friends in that place . Four years after my father's death , it began to be per- ceived that there was no purpose to be ...
... gentlemen , one of whom has since published interesting memoirs , had been students in Oxford , and had many friends in that place . Four years after my father's death , it began to be per- ceived that there was no purpose to be ...
Side 33
... gentleman , and above his calling . Certain it is , that he liked better to be doing business on shore , as at Acre . But however that may have been , surely the man whose name Napoleon could never pronounce without vexation , must have ...
... gentleman , and above his calling . Certain it is , that he liked better to be doing business on shore , as at Acre . But however that may have been , surely the man whose name Napoleon could never pronounce without vexation , must have ...
Side 34
... gentlemen expected to see received with maternal pride . She declined to let me continue at the Bath school l ; and I went to another , in the county of Wilts , of which the recommendation lay in the religious character of the master ...
... gentlemen expected to see received with maternal pride . She declined to let me continue at the Bath school l ; and I went to another , in the county of Wilts , of which the recommendation lay in the religious character of the master ...
Side 35
... servant at worst , she turned ; and , oh heavens ! whom should she behold but his most Christian Majesty advancing upon her , with a brilliant suite of gentlemen , young and old , equipped for the chase , who EARLY DAYS . 35.
... servant at worst , she turned ; and , oh heavens ! whom should she behold but his most Christian Majesty advancing upon her , with a brilliant suite of gentlemen , young and old , equipped for the chase , who EARLY DAYS . 35.
Side 60
... Gentlemen , no more than twopence for each ; ' and so on until we left the place . The same complaint has been often made as to Westminster Abbey ; and the sting of the complaint has been thrown into a shape which I could not , in ...
... Gentlemen , no more than twopence for each ; ' and so on until we left the place . The same complaint has been often made as to Westminster Abbey ; and the sting of the complaint has been thrown into a shape which I could not , in ...
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