The Novelist's Magazine, Volume 15Harrison and Company, 1784 A collection of separately paged novels. |
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Pagina 616
... favour from me , arifes from the hoped - for reconciliation with my real friends , not my Judas protector . · I am careless at prefent of confe- I hate myself : and who is quences . it I have reafon to value ? -Not the man who could ...
... favour from me , arifes from the hoped - for reconciliation with my real friends , not my Judas protector . · I am careless at prefent of confe- I hate myself : and who is quences . it I have reafon to value ? -Not the man who could ...
Pagina 629
... favour . It was plain to me , indeed , to whom you communicated all that you knew of your own heart , though not all of it that I found out , that love had pretty early gained footing in it . And this you yourself would have dif ...
... favour . It was plain to me , indeed , to whom you communicated all that you knew of your own heart , though not all of it that I found out , that love had pretty early gained footing in it . And this you yourself would have dif ...
Pagina 660
... favoured by the fmiles of very fine ladies , though I fay it , ' [ and I looked modeft ] both abroad and at home ... favour ; and who are deter- mined not to be convinced . And ‹ what , pray , must be the issue , when her uncle's ...
... favoured by the fmiles of very fine ladies , though I fay it , ' [ and I looked modeft ] both abroad and at home ... favour ; and who are deter- mined not to be convinced . And ‹ what , pray , must be the issue , when her uncle's ...
Pagina 663
... favour me with your company as often as See Page 631 . C I. I therefore requested Mrs. Moore to Rep in , and defire to know whether the would be pleased to admit me to attend her in her apartment , on occasion of the letters I had left ...
... favour me with your company as often as See Page 631 . C I. I therefore requested Mrs. Moore to Rep in , and defire to know whether the would be pleased to admit me to attend her in her apartment , on occasion of the letters I had left ...
Pagina 670
... favour , O darkest of human minds ! ' Then turning from me , wiping her eyes , and again turning towards me , but her sweet face half - afide , What ⚫ difficulties haft thou involved me in ! • —That thou hadft a plain path before thee ...
... favour , O darkest of human minds ! ' Then turning from me , wiping her eyes , and again turning towards me , but her sweet face half - afide , What ⚫ difficulties haft thou involved me in ! • —That thou hadft a plain path before thee ...
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
affure anfwer becauſe Belford bleffed cafe caufe Clariffa colonel confequence coufin creature curfed daugh dear dearest deferved defire Dorcas excufe eyes fafe faid fake fame favour feems feen felf fellow fend fent fervant fhall fhew fhould fifter fince fome foon forgive foul fpirit ftill fubject fuch fuffer fuppofe fure give hand happy heart herſelf Hickman himſelf honour hope houfe houſe Jack JOHN BEL juft Lady Betty laft lefs letter Lord Lovelace Lovick Madam Mifs Harlowe Mifs Rawlins MISS CLARISSA HARLOWE moft Morden moſt mother muft muſt myſelf never obferve obliged occafion paffed perfon pleafed pleaſed pleaſure poor prefent promife racter reafon refolved ROBERT LOVE Sally Martin ſay ſhall ſhe tell thee thefe ther theſe thing thofe thoſe thou thought tion told Tourville uncle uſed vifit vile whofe woman worfe wretch write yourſelf
Populaire passages
Pagina 746 - ... have so much experienced, and so much abused. I don't presume to think you should receive me. — No, indeed! — My name is — I don't know what my name is! — I never dare to wish to come into your family again ! — But your heavy curse, my papa. — Yes, I will call you papa, and help yourself as you can — for you are my own dear papa, whether you will or not — and though I am an unworthy child — yet I am your child PAPER in.
Pagina 978 - Much more lively and affecting," says one of the principal characters, " must be the style of those who write in the height of a present distress, the mind tortured by the pangs of uncertainty, — the events then hidden in the womb of fate, — than the dry, narrative, unanimated style of a person relating difficulties and dangers surmounted, can be, — the relater perfectly at ease, and, if himself unmoved by his own story, not likely greatly to affect the reader.