Aubrey: A Novel, Bind 2T. N. Longman, 1804 - 390 sider |
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Side 63
... Oporto for his refidence . The allowance he made me was handfome ; and , had he not preffed me in a very warm manner to go to him , I should have been con- tented to continue at home , for a reason which I fhall now tell you , but to ...
... Oporto for his refidence . The allowance he made me was handfome ; and , had he not preffed me in a very warm manner to go to him , I should have been con- tented to continue at home , for a reason which I fhall now tell you , but to ...
Side 176
... Oporto , where , after beating off and on fome hours at the mouth of the river waiting the tide , we were fafely landed . " I need hardly defcribe the town to you ; you know that it gave name to the whole kingdom , that it is a bishop's ...
... Oporto , where , after beating off and on fome hours at the mouth of the river waiting the tide , we were fafely landed . " I need hardly defcribe the town to you ; you know that it gave name to the whole kingdom , that it is a bishop's ...
Side 177
... with me to come to Oporto ; but , before he en- tered upon it , he inquired what con- nexions I had formed , and whether I had yet engaged the affections of any 15 Woman woman of fortune . Had he not looked fo fadly AUBREY . 177.
... with me to come to Oporto ; but , before he en- tered upon it , he inquired what con- nexions I had formed , and whether I had yet engaged the affections of any 15 Woman woman of fortune . Had he not looked fo fadly AUBREY . 177.
Side 180
... Oporto , and continue his tra- vels ; but , accidentally meeting Har- riet at the conful's , he changed his plan , and has remained here ever • fince . When he came he brought < only a letter from Lifbon for the con- ful ; but , fince ...
... Oporto , and continue his tra- vels ; but , accidentally meeting Har- riet at the conful's , he changed his plan , and has remained here ever • fince . When he came he brought < only a letter from Lifbon for the con- ful ; but , fince ...
Side 181
... Oporto , I could not blame him ; and , to be the guardian of my fifter's honour and happinefs , was a thought fo pleafing to me , that it made fome amends for the painful one of the distance I was from the darlings of my heart . I told ...
... Oporto , I could not blame him ; and , to be the guardian of my fifter's honour and happinefs , was a thought fo pleafing to me , that it made fome amends for the painful one of the distance I was from the darlings of my heart . I told ...
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affiftance affured anfwer Arthur Arthur-William Arthurina aſked beautiful bleffing Cæfar cauſe Charles Cowper cheft confiderable continued converfation countenance Cowfel Cowper cried dear dear boy defired Don Alvarez Donna Seraphina Elton eyes faid Aubrey faid fhe fame Fanny Rofs Fanny's father fave fecret feemed felf fettled fhall fhould fide fifter fince firſt fituation Flourish fmile fome foon fortune foul friendſhip ftate ftill fubject fuch fuffered fufficient fure furpriſe hand happineſs happy Harriet heart herſelf himſelf houfe houſe increaſed laft lefs lofs loft M'Knucle Mariton marriage Melford mind moft moidores morning moſt muft muſt myſelf obferved Oporto paffed paffion perfon pleaſure prefent preffed promiſed Pruin purpoſe raphina reafon refolved refpecting reft replied ſaid Senfitive ſhe Smyth Tallboy tell thefe theſe thofe Thornbury thought tion Titian told took underſtand uſe virtue whofe wife
Populære passager
Side 55 - But little do men perceive what solitude is, and how far it extendeth. For a crowd is not company, and faces are but a gallery of pictures, and talk but a tinkling cymbal, where there is no love.
Side 129 - All things to man's delightful use ; the roof Of thickest covert was inwoven shade Laurel and myrtle, and what higher grew Of firm and fragrant leaf; on either side Acanthus, and each odorous bushy shrub Fenced up the verdant wall ; each beauteous flower. Iris all hues, roses, and jessamine, Rear'd high their flourish'd heads between, and wrought Mosaic ; under foot the violet, Crocus, and hyacinth, with rich inlay Broider'd the ground...
Side 129 - Mosaic; under foot the violet, Crocus, and hyacinth, with rich inlay Broider'd the ground, more colour'd than with stone Of costliest emblem : other creature here, Beast, bird, insect, or worm, durst enter none, Such was their awe of man.
Side 48 - Age of Painting, about Leo the Tenth's Time, ufed this deeper and richer Kind of coloring ; and I fear one might add, that the glaring Lights introduced by Guido, went a great Way toward the Declenfion of that Art; as the enfeebling of the Colors by Carlo Marat (or, if you pleafe pleafe, by his Followers) hath fince almoft completed the Fall of it in Italy.
Side 48 - Judgment is fo apt to be guided by fome particular Attachments (and that more perhaps in this Part of Beauty than any other,) yet I am a good deal...
Side 204 - Look round !" thundered through my ear, in my father's voice, from a corner of the room. I involuntarily obeyed, and, as my eye caught his figure at his chamber-door, he raifed a vial to his mouth.
Side 201 - I loon, however, found that fleep was out of the queftion: the remembrance of my father's converfation by degrees faded away, and gave place to that of Donna Seraphina. The latter part of it revived in my imagination with double force, and brought with it an irrefiftible afiemblage of charms: the ramparts fell L 4 before before them one after another.
Side 51 - ... other Three. I fhall therefore have much lefs to fay of it, than of each of the others ; and fhall only give you Two or Three Obfervations, relating to it. As to the Color of the Body in general, the moft beautiful perhaps that ever was imagined, was that which...
Side 51 - t bouts de doigts ; it weeps all over." " —Clearly, by G— d ?" returned his lordfhip: " Le Brun was a famous " painter of Magdclens: this is a — a" — "- Titian, my lord." — " I know ; it " is equal to his Venus, by G — d...