| Jonathan Swift - 1883 - 504 páginas
...naturally no very exact correspondent, and when I leave a country without probability of returning, I think as seldom as I can of what I loved or esteemed...unconcerned in public events : for if your friends the Whigs t continue you may hope for some favour; if the Tories return, f you are at least sure of quiet. You... | |
| Jonathan Swift, Walter Scott - 1883 - 510 páginas
...naturally no very exact correspondent, and when I leave a country without probability of returning, I think as seldom as I can of what I loved or esteemed...unconcerned in public events : for if your friends the Whigs t continue you may hope for some favour; if the Tories return, f you are at least sure of quiet. You... | |
| Howard Williams, Jonathan Swift, Alexander Pope - 1886 - 632 páginas
...naturally no very exact correspondent, and when I leave a country, without probability of returning, I think as seldom as I can of what I loved or esteemed...in public events ; for, if your friends the Whigs a continue, you may hope for some favour; if the Tories return, you are, at least, sure of quiet. You... | |
| Alexander Pope - 1871 - 534 páginas
...of returning, I think as seldom as I can of what I loved or esteemed in it, to avoid the desideriitm which of all things makes life most uneasy. But you...you may hope for some favour ; if the tories return, you are at least sure of quiet. You know how well I loved both Lord Oxford and Bolingbroke, and how... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1894 - 400 páginas
...friends, still more so. "When I leave a country without probability of returning," he writes to Pope, " I think as seldom as I can of what I loved or esteemed...desiderium which of all things makes life most uneasy." From a position of enormous influence he had now sunk into one which made it prudent for his friends... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1894 - 404 páginas
...influence. still more so. "When I leave a country without probability of returning," he writes to Pope, " I think as seldom as I can of what I loved or esteemed...desiderium which of all things makes life most uneasy." From a position of enormous influence he had now sunk into one which made it prudent for his friends... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1905 - 582 páginas
...the praise of half the nation, when he might be universally favoured 3. wrote to Pope in 1715 :— ' If your friends the Whigs continue, you may hope for some favour ; if the Tories return, you are at least sure of quiet.' Pope's Works($\ti\i\ and Courthope), vii. 10. Writing to Swift in... | |
| George Paston - 1909 - 420 páginas
...work to Swift at Dublin, and reproached him for his long silence. Swift replied in melancholy vein : " You talk at your ease, being wholly unconcerned in...you may hope for some favour ; if the Tories return, you are, at least, sure of quiet. You know how well I loved both Lord Oxford and Bolingbroke, and how... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1911 - 460 páginas
...naturally no very exact correspondent, and when I leave a country without a probability of returning, I think as seldom as I can of what I loved or esteemed...friends the Whigs continue, you may hope for some favour;2 if the Tories return, you are at least sure of quiet. You know how well I loved both Lord... | |
| Jonathan Swift - 1926 - 396 páginas
...Utrecht; no very exact correspondent, and when I leave a country without a probability of returning, I think as seldom as I can of what I loved or esteemed...you may hope for some favour; if the Tories return, you are at least sure of quiet. You know how well I loved both Lord Oxford and Bolingbroke, and how... | |
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