Once Upon a Time, Volume 2John Murray, 1854 - Great Britain |
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Page 4
... rapidly through the whole country , I would leave the Town to mend its follies as it best might , and set up for a teacher of the People . We would make your press do ten times its present work then 4 ONCE UPON A TIME .
... rapidly through the whole country , I would leave the Town to mend its follies as it best might , and set up for a teacher of the People . We would make your press do ten times its present work then 4 ONCE UPON A TIME .
Page 5
Charles Knight. make your press do ten times its present work then , Mr. Buckley . " " Ah , sir , great men like you always have their dreams . I once knew a very clever man who fancied the mail would some time or other go to York in ...
Charles Knight. make your press do ten times its present work then , Mr. Buckley . " " Ah , sir , great men like you always have their dreams . I once knew a very clever man who fancied the mail would some time or other go to York in ...
Page 11
... present Saint Margaret's Street was formed out of a thoroughfare known as Saint Mar- garet's Lane , which was so narrow that " pales were obliged to be placed , four feet high , between the foot - path and the coach - road , to preserve ...
... present Saint Margaret's Street was formed out of a thoroughfare known as Saint Mar- garet's Lane , which was so narrow that " pales were obliged to be placed , four feet high , between the foot - path and the coach - road , to preserve ...
Page 22
... present time . Let us turn again to Hogarth's print of ' Night ' -the scene , Charing Cross . It is a bonfire night . The fagot blazes in the centre of the narrow street ; the dozen farthing candles illuminate the barber's window ; the ...
... present time . Let us turn again to Hogarth's print of ' Night ' -the scene , Charing Cross . It is a bonfire night . The fagot blazes in the centre of the narrow street ; the dozen farthing candles illuminate the barber's window ; the ...
Page 25
... present century has seen flambeaux in London . The intelligent antiquary -not he who discovers nothing of antiquity but what is buried in the earth or described in the classics - may behold a relic of the manners of a hundred years ago ...
... present century has seen flambeaux in London . The intelligent antiquary -not he who discovers nothing of antiquity but what is buried in the earth or described in the classics - may behold a relic of the manners of a hundred years ago ...
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Common terms and phrases
amongst ancient ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATIONS Bekfudi black ditch bull-bait called Castle century CHARLES cheap coach Court Crabbe eggs England English Essay Fanny Fanny Burney fashion Fcap Fourth Edition French George George's Chapel German happy heard HERMANN MELVILLE Hicks Hicks's Hall formerly History Hogarth honour Horace Walpole hundred India-rubber JOHN John Bunyan JOHN WILSON CROKER Johnson King labour Lady letter literary lived London look Lord Memoirs Miss Burney Montem morning never night Notes obsolete painted palace parish passed Plates poet poor Portrait Post 8vo pounds Queen Robert Jephson ROBERT SOUTHEY Royal 4to Royal 8vo says scene Second Edition shilling Silent Woman society Strawberry Hill streets taste tell things Third Edition tion town Translated Vols Voltaire walk Walpole to Mann Walpole's Windsor Woodcuts writing young
Popular passages
Page 20 - Box'd in a chair, the beau impatient sits, While spouts run clattering o'er the roof by fits, And ever and anon with frightful din The leather sounds ; he trembles from within.
Page 161 - Many a man lives a burden to the earth; but a good book is the precious life-blood of a master spirit, embalmed and treasured up on purpose to a life beyond life.
Page 143 - With speed that, entering, speaks his haste to go, He bids the gazing throng around him fly, And carries fate and physic in his eye...
Page 141 - Rapine and Wrong and Fear usurp'd her place, And a bold, artful, surly, savage race; Who, only skill'd to take the finny tribe, The yearly dinner, or septennial bribe...
Page 142 - Theirs is yon House that holds the parish poor, Whose walls of mud scarce bear the broken door ; There, where the putrid vapours, flagging, play, And the dull wheel hums doleful through the day ;— There children dwell who know no parents...
Page 91 - MDCCLXV. .LHE following work was found in the library of an ancient catholic family in the north of England. It was printed at Naples, in the black letter, in the year 1529.
Page 85 - My dear Sir, you don't call Rousseau bad company. Do you really think him a bad man?" JOHNSON. "Sir, if you are talking jestingly of this, I don't talk with you. If you mean to be serious, I think him one of the worst of men; a rascal, who ought to be hunted out of society, as he has been. Three or four nations have expelled him: and it is a shame that he is protected in this country.
Page 60 - ... one tallow candle at the end, we tumbled over the bed of the child, to whom the ghost comes, and whom they are murdering by inches in such insufferable heat and stench. At the top of the room are ropes to dry clothes. I asked if we were to have rope-dancing between the acts ? We...
Page 27 - VAUX'S (WSW) Handbook to the Antiquities in the British Museum ; being a Description of the Remains of Greek, Assyrian, Egyptian, and Etruscan Art preserved there. With 300 Woodcuts. Post Svo.
Page 145 - The holy stranger to these dismal walls ; And doth not he, the pious man, appear, He, "passing rich with forty pounds a year?