| Alexander Pope, William Lisle Bowles - 1806 - 466 páginas
...pleafure, had I not come. I have nothing more to fay, as I have nothing in my mind but this prefent object, which indeed is extraordinary. This man was...die like other men, any more than to live like them *. I am ever yours, etc. LETTER XVIII. TO THE SAME. Stowe, July 4. E poft after I writ to you, I received,... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1806 - 466 páginas
...pleafure, had I not come. I have nothing more to fay, as I have nothing in my mind but this prefent object, which indeed is extraordinary. This man was...die like other men, any more than to live like them *. I am ever yours, etc. LETTER XVIII.' TO THE SAME. Stowe, July 4. poft after I writ to you, I received,... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1812 - 350 páginas
...etc. for two days only, and they all go away together. He says he will go at the month's end, if he is alive. I believe I shall get home on Wednesday...die like other men, any more than to live like them. I am ever yours, etc. LETTER XVIII. TO THE SAME. 'J'HE post after I writ to you, I received, with great... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1824 - 630 páginas
...get home on Wednesday night. I hope Lady Suffolk will not go sooner for Stowe, and, if not, I will go with her willingly. Nothing can be more affecting...like other men, any more than to live like them.* I am ever yours, &c. LETTER L1II. TO MRS. MARTHA BLOUNT. December 27I AM sorry you are so engaged and... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1824 - 634 páginas
...get home on Wednesday night. I hope Lady Suffolk will not go sooner for Stowe, and, if not, I will go with her willingly. Nothing can be more affecting...like other men, any more than to live like them.* I am ever yours, &c. LETTER LIII. TO MRS. MARTHA BLOUNT. December 27. I AM sorry you are so engaged... | |
| Edmund Lodge - 1835 - 288 páginas
...but invites them to stay and dine or sup, &c. He says he will go at the month's end if he is alive. Nothing can be more affecting and melancholy to me...like other men, any more than to live like them." He did however reach the end of his intended journey, and died at Lisbon on the twenty-fifth of the... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1847 - 488 páginas
...get home on Wednesday night. I hope Lady Suffolk will not go sooner for Stowe, and, if not, I will go with her willingly. Nothing can be more affecting...die like other men, any more than to live like them 5. I am ever yours, &c. LETTER LTII. TO MRS. MARTHA BLOUNT. December 27. I AM sorry you are so engaged... | |
| Charles Dickens, William Harrison Ainsworth, Albert Smith - 1847 - 674 páginas
...but invites them to stay and dine, or sup, &c. He says he will go at the month's end, if he is alive. Nothing can be more affecting and melancholy to me...like other men, any more than to live like them." Contrary to the presages contained in Pope's letter, he did reach the end of his intended journey,... | |
| Charles Dickens, William Harrison Ainsworth, Albert Smith - 1847 - 678 páginas
...but invites them to stay and dine, or sup, &c. He says he will go at the month's end, if he is alive. Nothing can be more affecting and melancholy to me...nothing more to say, as I have nothing in my mind bat this present object, which indeed is extraordinary. This man was never born to die like other men,... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1853 - 392 páginas
...&c., for two days only, and they all go away together. He says he will go at the month's end, if he is alive. I believe I shall get home on Wednesday...die like other men, any more than to live like them. I am ever yours, &c. In writing to his learned counsel, Fortescue, August 23, 1735, the poet asks,... | |
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