The Lounger, Volume 1

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A. Strahan and T. Cadell, 1788 - 314 pages
 

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Page 271 - I care not, Fortune, what you me deny : You cannot rob me of free Nature's grace ; You cannot shut the windows of the sky, Through which Aurora shows her brightening face; You cannot bar my constant feet to trace The woods and lawns, by living stream, at eve...
Page 151 - My girls' homemade gowns, of which they were lately so proud, have been thrown by with contempt since they saw Mrs. Mushroom's muslins from Bengal; our barndoor fowls, we used to say, were so fat and welltasted, we now make awkward attempts, by garlic and pepper, to turn into the form of curries and peelaws...
Page 139 - Lumber was inflexible to his wife's demand of a weekly rout and card assembly. This, and several other indulgences, she did not find Mr. Lumber silly enough to grant ; but she generally found Mrs. Lumber silly enough to resent the refusal. " But, to end this digression, which I am afraid has already tired you, and to proceed to my own story. — Mr. Lumber being my banker while I was abroad, on coming to Scotland, I was often invited to his house, where I was treated with great hospitality and attention....
Page 170 - Even of those few novels which superior men have written, it cannot always be said that they are equally calculated to improve as to delight. Nor is this only to be objected to some who have been professedly less scrupulous in that particular; but I am afraid may be also imputed to those whose works were meant to convey no bad impression, but, on the contrary, were intended to aid the cause of virtue, and to hold out patterns of the most exalted benevolence. I am not, however...
Page 276 - ... sacrilege that drives the deity from the place. This sentiment of memory is felt but very imperfectly in a town ; in the country it retains all its force, and with Colonel Caustic it operates in the strongest manner possible. Here he withdraws himself...
Page 22 - ... had come to them, rather than that they had been made for the fashion ;) his white silk stockings ornamented with figured clocks, and his shoes with high insteps, buckled with small round gold buckles. His sword, with a silver hilt somewhat tarnished, I might have thought...
Page 240 - Tragedy now displays, by means of which it inculcates on men the proper government of their passions.
Page 307 - ... the Goddess of Friendship herself had descended upon earth, and was animating the voices of the companions of Flavillus. With all this Flavillus was far from being happy. Superior to the companions he now lived with, he could not always avoid reflecting on the...
Page 132 - ... me they found it very palatable. Like his taste in this instance, his other senses appear to be subject to much uncertainty. His seeing and hearing are at some times remarkably acute ; at others he seems hardly to possess those faculties at all. Like the Chacrelas, in the island of Java, his sight is generally much quicker in the night than the day-time ; and the later the hour, it appears to be the clearer and the more distinct. Like some other savages, he seems to delight in music; though his...
Page 2 - As far as the freedom from diffipation extends, the writer of the prefent Paper thinks he may lay claim to the laft of thofe characters. It were needlefs, and indeed improper, to trouble his readers with the hiftory of thofe incidents in his life which have thrown him out of the number of the...

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