The Polyanthea: Or, A Collection of Interesting Fragments, in Prose and Verse:: Consisting of Original Anecdotes, Biographical Sketches, Dialogues, Letters, Characters, &c. &c. In Two Volumes, Volume 1J. Budd, 1804 - Anecdotes |
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Page 3
... tell a good story , you made him the happiest man on earth . Mitres , arch mitres , and church preferments vanished at a stroke of wit or a pun ; and I don't suppose that ever he dreamt of any thing beyond the innocent enjoyment of the ...
... tell a good story , you made him the happiest man on earth . Mitres , arch mitres , and church preferments vanished at a stroke of wit or a pun ; and I don't suppose that ever he dreamt of any thing beyond the innocent enjoyment of the ...
Page 7
... tell you , if they're cold ones , That you may father on the Devil Each act and deed of moral evil ; His back is broad enough , we know , To bear them all , like Richard Roe . In ev'ry suit Old Nick ' s engag'd , Yet strange to tell ...
... tell you , if they're cold ones , That you may father on the Devil Each act and deed of moral evil ; His back is broad enough , we know , To bear them all , like Richard Roe . In ev'ry suit Old Nick ' s engag'd , Yet strange to tell ...
Page 8
... tell the joke ! We hav'nt done with savings yet , In wear and tare , and even trett : The buckle's sav'd that binds the knee , Or tape in bow - knots three times three . The buckle's sav'd that binds the shoe , And any buckle now will ...
... tell the joke ! We hav'nt done with savings yet , In wear and tare , and even trett : The buckle's sav'd that binds the knee , Or tape in bow - knots three times three . The buckle's sav'd that binds the shoe , And any buckle now will ...
Page 17
... tell the rest . Before you bring him on the stage , Pray tell the reader Paddy's age : Just twenty - four - I think you're right , For I was told the same last night . The gods to honest Pat were kind In gifts of body and of mind ; For ...
... tell the rest . Before you bring him on the stage , Pray tell the reader Paddy's age : Just twenty - four - I think you're right , For I was told the same last night . The gods to honest Pat were kind In gifts of body and of mind ; For ...
Page 19
... tell the rest . That fleecy coat I'll quickly change , With cows and sheep no more you '11 Your hair with riband shall be bound , i Your hat with roses deck'd thrice round ; Your homespun hose shall yield to silk , Your gloves as white ...
... tell the rest . That fleecy coat I'll quickly change , With cows and sheep no more you '11 Your hair with riband shall be bound , i Your hat with roses deck'd thrice round ; Your homespun hose shall yield to silk , Your gloves as white ...
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appear Archbishop arms beauty BERTRAND DU GUESCLIN Bishop body brother brought Brun called castle church Clar command Corfe Castle Dearg death Derry divine Doctor DOCTOR DOCTOR Dublin Duke Earl enemies England English eyes father favour fire flower French Gellert Grace hand happy hath head heart Heaven Henry honour horse Husband Ireland justice King knew Lady Banks land late Le Notre learning letter live Louvois Majesty manner Marchwiel Master ment mind morning murder never night obliged occasion OLIVER MAILLARD Osakoi Parliament person Philip Percival Primate prince Privy Counsellor Queen rebels servant Sheridan shewing siege siege of Clonmel Sir Henry Sidney soldiers soul Spaniard spect Swedenborgians sword tears Terry ther thing thought tion told Tom o'Bedlam took town twine vote wife words wounded young
Popular passages
Page 306 - At home, by ill temper. She was a professed enemy to flattery, And was seldom known to praise or commend ; BUT The talents in which she principally excelled, Were difference of opinion, and discovering flaws and imperfections. She was an admirable economist, And, without prodigality, Dispensed plenty to every person in her family ; BUT Would sacrifice their eyes to a farthing candle. She sometimes made her husband happy with her good qualities ; BUT Much more frequently miserable — with her many...
Page 248 - Arriving at the mount of St. Mary's in the stony stage where I now stand, I have brought you some fine biscuits, baked in the oven of charity, and carefully conserved for the chickens of the church, the sparrows of the Spirit, and the sweet swallows of salvation...
Page 378 - I have regularly and attentively perused these Holy Scriptures, and am of opinion that this volume, independently of its divine origin, contains more true sublimity, more exquisite beauty, more pure morality, more important history, and finer strains of poetry and eloquence, than can be collected from all other books, in whatever age or language they may have been written.
Page 280 - ... deduced from the nature and reason of things. We believe the existence of an Almighty Being from the consideration of his wonderful works, from those innumerable celestial and glorious bodies, and from their wonderful order and harmony. "We have also spent some time in viewing those wonders which are to be seen in the minute part of the world, and that with great pleasure and satisfaction.
Page 305 - HERE lie the bodies of Thomas Bond, and Mary his wife. She was temperate, chaste, and charitable; BUT, she was proud, peevish, and passionate. She was an affectionate wife, and a tender mother...
Page 311 - ... that many of you will find it difficult to reconcile my appearance yesterday with my character. Many of you, I know, will say that my moments would have been better employed in praying for the unhappy man than in attending him to the fatal tree, and that perhaps curiosity was the only cause that converted me into a spectator on that occasion. But those who ascribe that uncharitable motive to me, are under a mistake. I...
Page 157 - Threni Hibernici ; or Ireland sympathizing with England and Scotland, in a sad lamentation for the loss of their Josiah...
Page 290 - Some years ago the Shawano Indians, being obliged to remove from their habitations, in their way took a Muskohge warrior, known by the name of old Scrany, prisoner; they bastinadoed him severely, and condemned him to the fiery torture.
Page 327 - ... or a man wounded. At another time, five boys fetched in four cows. They that stood on the hills, called to one in a house in the valley, crying, " Shoot, Anthony ; " but Anthony thought it good to sleep in a whole skin, and durst not look out, so that afterwards it grew into a proverbial jeer, from the defendants to the assailants, " Shoot, Anthony." The rebels having spent much time and ammunition, and some men, and yet being as far from hopes of taking the castle as the first day they came...
Page 379 - The two parts of which the Scriptures consist are connected by a chain of compositions which bear no resemblance, in form or style, to any that can be produced from the stores of Grecian, Indian, Persian, or even Arabian learning. The antiquity of those...