The Correspondence of Samuel Richardson, Author of Pamela, Clarissa, and Sir Charles Grandison: Selected from the Original Manuscripts, Bequeathed by Him to His Family, to which are Prefixed, a Biographical Account of that Author, and Observations on His Writings, Volume 2R. Phillips, 1804 - Novelists, English |
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Page 4
... fear Well- wyn stands a bad chance .. I am , & c TO MR . RICHARDSON . DEAR SIR , E. YOUNG . 1744 . DOES Lovelace more than a proud , bold , graceless , heart , long indulged in vice , would naturally do ? No. Is it contrary to the ...
... fear Well- wyn stands a bad chance .. I am , & c TO MR . RICHARDSON . DEAR SIR , E. YOUNG . 1744 . DOES Lovelace more than a proud , bold , graceless , heart , long indulged in vice , would naturally do ? No. Is it contrary to the ...
Page 12
... fear on the latter end of it ; and hope is ever inspiring pleasant dreams , and fear hideous ones .--- And if any good arises beyond our hope , we have such a diffidence of its stay , that the ap- prehension of losing it destroys the ...
... fear on the latter end of it ; and hope is ever inspiring pleasant dreams , and fear hideous ones .--- And if any good arises beyond our hope , we have such a diffidence of its stay , that the ap- prehension of losing it destroys the ...
Page 15
... Fear is a passion of great use ; and I hope this juncture will habituate our countrymen to such thoughts as will mingle kindly with those of God Almighty and of death . TO MR . RICHARDSON . MY DEAR SIR , July 17 , 1746 . AFTER long ...
... Fear is a passion of great use ; and I hope this juncture will habituate our countrymen to such thoughts as will mingle kindly with those of God Almighty and of death . TO MR . RICHARDSON . MY DEAR SIR , July 17 , 1746 . AFTER long ...
Page 74
... fear I shall greatly miss when they go to London : yet for the sort of people in the low station my old folks are in , I hardly ever met with more simplicity and good sense than they both have , and it is with some degree of pleasure ...
... fear I shall greatly miss when they go to London : yet for the sort of people in the low station my old folks are in , I hardly ever met with more simplicity and good sense than they both have , and it is with some degree of pleasure ...
Page 82
... fear in asserting themselves with modesty , and when occasionally called forth ? Is it that the men will be afraid of them , and shun them as wives ? Unworthy fear ! Let the wretches shun and be afraid of them . Unworthy of such ...
... fear in asserting themselves with modesty , and when occasionally called forth ? Is it that the men will be afraid of them , and shun them as wives ? Unworthy fear ! Let the wretches shun and be afraid of them . Unworthy of such ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquainted admirable affectionate humble Servant afraid agreeable amiable answer assure believe bless Bradshaigh charming chearful Cibber Cicero Clarissa compliments creature daughter dear Miss Highmore DEAR SIR delight DUNCOMBE Exeter College favour fear gentleman girl give glad grateful grateful Servant gratitude happy hear heard heart honour hope Isle of Wight judge kind lady letter Lisbon London Lord Lovelace Madam merit mind Miss Fielding Miss Mulso nature never night Night Thoughts North End obliged humble Servant occasion opinion pain papa Parson's Green perhaps PILKINGTON pleased pleasure poor Pray present racter reason rejoice RICHARDSON sensible shew sincere Sir Charles Sir Charles Grandison sorry soul spects spirits suffer sure tell tender thank ther thing thought tion truly Tunbridge virtue Wellwyn wife wish woman word worthy write young your's ΤΟ
Popular passages
Page 105 - What a knowledge of the human heart! Well might a critical judge of writing say, as he did to me, that your late brother's knowledge of it was not (fine writer as he was) comparable to yours. His was but as the knowledge of the outside of a clock-work machine, while yours was that of all the finer springs and movements of the inside.
Page 118 - Sel. Where shall my wonder and my praise begin ? From the successful labours of thy arms, Or from a theme more soft, and full of peace, Thy mercy and thy gentleness ? Oh, Tamerlane ! What can I pay thee for this noble usage, But grateful praise ? So Heaven itself is paid.
Page 97 - To whom in brief thus Abdiel stern replied: ' Apostate ! still thou err'st, nor end wilt find Of erring from the path of truth remote : Unjustly thou deprav'st it with the name Of servitude, to serve whom God ordains, Or nature; God and nature bid the same, When he who rules is worthiest, and excels Them whom he governs.
Page 176 - The delicious meal I made of Miss Byron on Sunday last has given me an appetite for another slice of her, off from the spit, before she is served up to the public table. If about five o'elock to-morrow afternoon will not be inconvenient, Mrs. Brown and I will come and piddle upon a bit more of her : but pray let your whole family, with Mrs.
Page 128 - ... patience, threw down the book, and vowed he would not read another line. To express or paint his passion would require such masterly hands as yours, or his own : he shuddered ; nay, the tears stood in his eyes: — 'What!
Page 133 - Antenor, now give o'er, For my sake talk of graves no more ; Death is not in our power to gain, And is both wish'd and fear'd in vain. Let's be as angry as we will, Grief sooner may distract than kill, And the unhappy often prove Death is as coy a thing as love. Those whose own sword their death did give, Afraid were, or asham'd, to live ; And by an act so desperate, Did poorly run away from fate ; 'Tis braver much t' outride the storm, Endure its rage, and shun its harm ; Affliction nobly undergone,...
Page 27 - I have read Miss Fielding with great pleasure. Your Clarissa is, I find, the Virgin-mother of several pieces ; which, like beautiful suckers, rise from her immortal root. I rejoice at it ; for the noblest compositions need such aids, as the multitude is swayed more by others
Page 206 - ... place, afraid of being seen as a thief of detection. The people of fashion, if he happen to cross a walk, (which he always does with precipitation), unsmiling their faces, as if they thought him in the way...
Page 236 - How can we hope that ladies will not think a good man a tame man ?" Among the correspondents of Richardson was Klopstock's first wife, who lived at Hamburg, and wrote very good English. She gives an account of how she fell in love with the poet on reading his ' Messiah,' before she ever saw him, how she afterward married him, and how happy she was.
Page 37 - And boast their clouds, their thunder, and their flame. The flame, the thunder, and the cloud, The night by day, the sea of blood, Hosts whirl'd in air, the yell of sinking throngs, The graveless dead an ocean warm'd, A firmament by mortals storm'd, To patient Britain's angry brow belongs. Or do I dream ? or do I rave ? Or see I Vulcan's sooty cave, Where Jove's red bolts the giant-brothers frame?