Select British Classics, 第 25 卷J. Conrad, 1803 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 23 筆
第 57 頁
... believe their fate in these cases depends upon the astrologer , and not upon the stars , as in the following letter from one , who , I fear , flatters himself with hopes of success , which are alto- gether groundless , since he does not ...
... believe their fate in these cases depends upon the astrologer , and not upon the stars , as in the following letter from one , who , I fear , flatters himself with hopes of success , which are alto- gether groundless , since he does not ...
第 74 頁
... believe it to be true , and therefore heartily pity the injured creature that wrote it . " SIR , To Isaac Bickerstaff , Esq . " YOU seem in many of your writings to be a " man of a very compassionate temper , and well ac- " quainted ...
... believe it to be true , and therefore heartily pity the injured creature that wrote it . " SIR , To Isaac Bickerstaff , Esq . " YOU seem in many of your writings to be a " man of a very compassionate temper , and well ac- " quainted ...
第 75 頁
... believe the " story could be true , because they did not believe any " man could be so false . Upon which I stole a look << upon him with an anguish not to be expressed . He " saw my eyes full of tears , yet had the cruelty to say ...
... believe the " story could be true , because they did not believe any " man could be so false . Upon which I stole a look << upon him with an anguish not to be expressed . He " saw my eyes full of tears , yet had the cruelty to say ...
第 86 頁
... believe his to be French , because it did not taste like what they sold for such . As a man ever pleads better than where his own personal in- terest is concerned , he exhibited to the court , with great eloquence , that this new ...
... believe his to be French , because it did not taste like what they sold for such . As a man ever pleads better than where his own personal in- terest is concerned , he exhibited to the court , with great eloquence , that this new ...
第 100 頁
... believe he penned himself , the petitioner not being able to ex- press his mind in paper under his present form , how- ever famous he might have been for making verses when he was in his original shape . To Isaac Bickerstaff , Esq ...
... believe he penned himself , the petitioner not being able to ex- press his mind in paper under his present form , how- ever famous he might have been for making verses when he was in his original shape . To Isaac Bickerstaff , Esq ...
常見字詞
acquaintance admired agreeable Anticyra Apartment appear bag-pipes beautiful behaviour Bickerstaff called character Cicero confess death delight desire discourse dress entertain esteem eyes father favour February 27 fortune Gascon gentleman give Great-Britain greatest hand happy hath heart honour humble servant humour husband imagination impertinent Isaac Bickerstaff kind King of Sweden lady lately learned letter live look lover mankind manner marriage ment mind Nando's nation nature never night observe occasion OVID particular pass passion persons petitioner petticoat pleased pleasure poet present proper Pyrrha racter reader reason received Roman censors Rome says sense Sheer-lane shew sion soul speak spirit Stratonice Styx Tatler Telemachus tell temper Terentia thing thought THURSDAY Timoleon tion told town turn Ulysses upholsterer VIRG Virgil virtue walk whole wife woman words write young