The Monthly Magazine, Or, British Register, Volume 5R. Phillips, 1798 - British periodicals |
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Page 42
Original Poetry . ( 43 ) ORIGINAL ANECDOTES AND REMAINS OF EMINENT PERSONS. SUSAN . Nay , Edward , fink not thus in vain diftrefs , Torturing my heart with needlefs wretchedness ; Hadit thou been doom'd , an outcalt wretch , 10go Where ...
Original Poetry . ( 43 ) ORIGINAL ANECDOTES AND REMAINS OF EMINENT PERSONS. SUSAN . Nay , Edward , fink not thus in vain diftrefs , Torturing my heart with needlefs wretchedness ; Hadit thou been doom'd , an outcalt wretch , 10go Where ...
Page 43
( 43 ) ORIGINAL ANECDOTES AND REMAINS OF EMINENT PERSONS . This Article is devoted to the Reception of Biographical Anecdotes , Papers , Letters , & c . and we request the Communications of fuch of our Readers as can affift us in these ...
( 43 ) ORIGINAL ANECDOTES AND REMAINS OF EMINENT PERSONS . This Article is devoted to the Reception of Biographical Anecdotes , Papers , Letters , & c . and we request the Communications of fuch of our Readers as can affift us in these ...
Page 123
• Original Poetry . ORIGINAL ANECDOTES AND REMAINS OF EMINENT PERSONS . [ In. The months , with all their fongs , and fruits and flow'rs , Vapours , and fullen clouds , and frofts , and fnows , In ceafelefs change , to Britain's studious ...
• Original Poetry . ORIGINAL ANECDOTES AND REMAINS OF EMINENT PERSONS . [ In. The months , with all their fongs , and fruits and flow'rs , Vapours , and fullen clouds , and frofts , and fnows , In ceafelefs change , to Britain's studious ...
Page 124
ORIGINAL ANECDOTES AND REMAINS OF EMINENT PERSONS . [ In our next Number we propose to commence an extenfive series of interefting articles , under the bead of WALPOLIANA , being a collection of original Bon - mots , Anecdotes , & c ...
ORIGINAL ANECDOTES AND REMAINS OF EMINENT PERSONS . [ In our next Number we propose to commence an extenfive series of interefting articles , under the bead of WALPOLIANA , being a collection of original Bon - mots , Anecdotes , & c ...
Page 199
... , " fhall fave his foul alive ! All alive ! alive ho ! " to the astonishment of the congregation . [ To be continued regularly . ] MONTH . MA @ . No. XXIX . D d ( 200 ) ORIGINAL ANECDOTES AND REMAINS OF EMINENT PERSONS.
... , " fhall fave his foul alive ! All alive ! alive ho ! " to the astonishment of the congregation . [ To be continued regularly . ] MONTH . MA @ . No. XXIX . D d ( 200 ) ORIGINAL ANECDOTES AND REMAINS OF EMINENT PERSONS.
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Popular passages
Page 116 - Warms in the sun, refreshes in the breeze, Glows in the stars, and blossoms in the trees : Lives through all life, extends through all extent, Spreads undivided, operates unspent...
Page 366 - He appeared very ambitious to learn to write ; and one of the attornies got a board knocked up at a window on the top of a stair-case ; and that was his desk, where he sat and wrote after copies of court and other hands the clerks gave him. He made himself so expert a writer that he took in business, and earned some pence by hackney-writing.
Page 283 - I wished to make him the happy instrument of alleviating the horrors of hopeless captivity, when the brave are overpowered and made prisoners of war. It was perhaps, fortunate for you, Madam, that he was from home, for it was my intention to have taken him on board the Ranger, and to have detained him until, through his means, a general and fair exchange of prisoners, as well in Europe as in America, had been effected.
Page 366 - ... desk where he sat and wrote after copies of court and other hands the clerks gave him. He made himself so expert a writer that he took in business and earned some pence by hackney-writing. And thus by degrees he pushed his faculties and fell to forms, and, by books that were lent him, became an exquisite entering clerk; and by the same course of improvement of himself, an able counsel first in special pleading then at large.
Page 436 - ... and incorrection, a master or two produces models formed by purity and taste; Virgil, Horace, Boileau, Corneille, Racine, Pope, exploded the licentiousness that reigned before them. What happened ? Nobody...
Page 366 - Saunders succeeded in the room of Pemberton. His character and his beginning were equally strange. He was at first no better than a poor beggar boy, if not a parish foundling, without known parents or relations. He had found a way to live by obsequiousness in Clement's Inn, as I remember, and courting the attorney's clerks for scraps.
Page 10 - But we may perceive the mixed kind of fables, as well in many other particulars, as when they relate that Discord, at a banquet of the gods, threw a golden apple, and that a dispute about it arising among the goddesses, they were sent by Jupiter to take the judgment of Paris, who, charmed with the beauty of Venus, gave her the apple in preference to the rest.
Page 85 - Nor knowing us nor known : and if by prayer Incessant I could hope to change the will Of him who all things can, I would not cease To weary him with my assiduous cries: But prayer against his absolute Decree No more avails than breath against the wind, Blown stifling back on him that breathes it forth : Therefore to his great bidding I submit.
Page 356 - It feems as if he had juft come from the king's clofet, or from the apartments of the men whom he defcribes, and was telling his reader, in plain honeft terms, what he had feen and heard.
Page 85 - The fig-tree, not that kind for fruit renown'd, But such as, at this day, to Indians known; In Malabar or Decan spreads her arms, Branching so broad and long, that in the ground The bended twigs take root, and daughters grow About the mother tree, a pillar'd shade, High overarch'd, and echoing walks between...