Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London During the Eighteenth Century: Including the Charities, Depravities, Dresses, and Amusements, of the Citizens of London, During that Period; with a Review of the State of Society in 1807; to which is Added, a Sketch of the Domestic Architecture and of the Various Improvements in the Metropolis; Illustrated by Forty-five Engravings, Volume 1Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, 1810 - Architecture |
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Page v
... honoured : -A more con- vincing proof of that approbation which every Author most ardently desires seldom occurs , and still more seldom is expressed in so short a period as between the dates of the first appearance of the book and the ...
... honoured : -A more con- vincing proof of that approbation which every Author most ardently desires seldom occurs , and still more seldom is expressed in so short a period as between the dates of the first appearance of the book and the ...
Page vi
... honours this publication with his notice in the Eclectic Review remarks , " We should have thought the progress of learning , and the novelties in the trade of books , during the last century , well intitled to some regard ; and , as Mr ...
... honours this publication with his notice in the Eclectic Review remarks , " We should have thought the progress of learning , and the novelties in the trade of books , during the last century , well intitled to some regard ; and , as Mr ...
Page vii
... honour , wrote thus to Mr. Bruce , the celebrated Abyssinian Traveller : “ I do not get the Monthly Review , and never saw that article in it which has been so injurious to you . In- deed , I seldom see any Reviews , unless what is cal ...
... honour , wrote thus to Mr. Bruce , the celebrated Abyssinian Traveller : “ I do not get the Monthly Review , and never saw that article in it which has been so injurious to you . In- deed , I seldom see any Reviews , unless what is cal ...
Page ix
... honour and morality , envy and malice , and the rest- less spirit termed ill - nature , should really be subdued in the breast of the Censor , so far as to permit him not to expose himself , and the Review his individual article ...
... honour and morality , envy and malice , and the rest- less spirit termed ill - nature , should really be subdued in the breast of the Censor , so far as to permit him not to expose himself , and the Review his individual article ...
Page xi
... honour and admire , in pro- portion to the dangers and difficulties of his office . The Critical Review for May 1808 - versus " Anec- dotes of the Manners and Customs of London . " The writer of this article says : " The following ...
... honour and admire , in pro- portion to the dangers and difficulties of his office . The Critical Review for May 1808 - versus " Anec- dotes of the Manners and Customs of London . " The writer of this article says : " The following ...
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advertisement antient appears apprehend attended beadle bills of mortality carried charity Church Church of England City of London clothes coaches Coffee-house Committee common constables Court cure custom Ditto dressed Duke duty eccentricity entertainment expence folly four French frequently gaol gentlemen give guineas hand hath honour hospital infants James Sayer James's John Fielding John Henley Jury Justices King King's labour ladies Liberty of Westminster Lord Chamberlain Lord Mayor Magistrates Majesty Majesty's manner masters ment Metropolis night notice observed occasion offenders Officers of Arms parish persons poor pounds present Prince Prince of Wales Princess Princess of Wales proper punishment reader received Reviewer Royal sent servants shew shilling Sir John Fielding Society South-Sea streets subscribers subscription Tatler Tavern thing tion trade trustees ward watchmen at 137 Westminster women workhouses wretches
Popular passages
Page 367 - For God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of love, which ye have shewed toward his name, in that ye have ministered to the saints, and do minister.
Page 418 - Protestant Subjects dissenting from the Church of England from the Penalties of certain Laws...
Page 150 - ... that head. We are satisfied it is less cruelty to take the child with us, even supposing a state of annihilation as some dream of, than to leave her friendless in the world, exposed to ignorance and misery. Now in order to obviate some censures which may proceed either from ignorance or malice, we think it proper to inform the world, that we firmly believe the existence of...
Page 367 - And we desire that every one of you do shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end : 12 That ye be not slothful, but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises.
Page 125 - Gentiles squabble. Here crafty courtiers are too wise For those who trust to Fortune ; They see the cheat with clearer eyes, Who peep behind the curtain. 3. " Our greatest ladies hither come, And ply in chariots daily ; Oft pawn their jewels for a sum To venture in the Alley.
Page 374 - Though gaming in any degree is perverting the original and useful design of that Coffee-house, it may in some measure be excusable to speculate on the following subjects: — Mr. Wilkes being elected member for London ; which was done from 5 to 50 guineas per cent.
Page 127 - Five hundred millions, notes and bonds, Our stocks are worth in value ; But neither lie in goods or lands, Or money let me tell ye. Yet though our foreign trade is lost, Of mighty wealth we vapour, When all the riches that we boast Consist in scraps of paper.
Page 367 - Remember, therefore from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do thy first works; or else I will come unto thee quickly, and will remove thy candlestick out of his place, except thou repent.
Page 310 - Bride was conducted to her bed-chamber, and the Bridegroom to his dressing-room, where the Duke undressed him, and his Majesty did his Royal Highness the honour to put on his shirt. The Bride was undressed by the Princesses ; and being in bed in a rich undress, his Majesty came
Page 408 - Queen's demise she had lived in obscurity. This unknown arrived in London from Mansfield, in 1714, drawn by six horses. She frequently said that her father was a nobleman, but that, her elder brother dying unmarried, the title was extinct ; adding, that she had an uncle then living, whose title was his least recommendation. " It was conjectured that she might be the daughter of a Roman Catholic, who had consigned her to a convent, whence a brother had released her and supported her in privacy.