Samuel Richardson |
From inside the book
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Page 17
... Byron of the novel spent her girlhood , it is doubtful whether it was more than a playful appellation . Such as it was , how- ever , the northern half of The Grange was Richardson's country home for fifteen years , or until he moved to ...
... Byron of the novel spent her girlhood , it is doubtful whether it was more than a playful appellation . Such as it was , how- ever , the northern half of The Grange was Richardson's country home for fifteen years , or until he moved to ...
Page 140
... Byron or Clementina ; every turn and every incident was eagerly canvassed , and the author enjoyed the benefit of knowing beforehand how hist situations would strike . " It was here also that he studied his guests , of whom he always ...
... Byron or Clementina ; every turn and every incident was eagerly canvassed , and the author enjoyed the benefit of knowing beforehand how hist situations would strike . " It was here also that he studied his guests , of whom he always ...
Page 147
... Byron is an orphan of great personal charms a little " clunch , " perhaps , like Miss Mulso who has been educated by her grand- parents in a most exemplary way . Having , moreover , a comfortable fortune of fifteen thousand pounds , she ...
... Byron is an orphan of great personal charms a little " clunch , " perhaps , like Miss Mulso who has been educated by her grand- parents in a most exemplary way . Having , moreover , a comfortable fortune of fifteen thousand pounds , she ...
Page 148
... Byron , being pressed to explain why she cannot receive his addresses , tells him frankly , and much to his disgust , that she has no opinion of his morals . He afterwards renews his suit in a way of which the following may serve as a ...
... Byron , being pressed to explain why she cannot receive his addresses , tells him frankly , and much to his disgust , that she has no opinion of his morals . He afterwards renews his suit in a way of which the following may serve as a ...
Page 149
... Byron's positive declaration that she will never more receive Sir Hargrave's visits , an announcement which naturally drives him to desperation , after which the letter placidly concludes with a description of the dress in which the ...
... Byron's positive declaration that she will never more receive Sir Hargrave's visits , an announcement which naturally drives him to desperation , after which the letter placidly concludes with a description of the dress in which the ...
Common terms and phrases
Aaron Hill admirers afterwards already appear Astrĉa author of Clarissa Belfour Bradshaigh Chapone chapter character Cibber Clarissa Clementina Colley Cibber correspondence critic dated daughter Defreval Diderot Donnellan doubt edition Edwards epistles F. W. H. Myers Familiar Letters Fielding Fielding's French friends genius gentleman grotto H. D. Traill heart heroine Highmore Hill's History honour J. A. Symonds John Johnson Jones Joseph Andrews Klopstock Lady Bradshaigh Leslie Stephen Lovelace marriage married Miss Byron Miss Mulso Miss Talbot moral never North End novel Pamela Parson's Green person Pilkington Plaistow Pope Pope's Porretta praise Preface printer probably Prof published R. W. Church readers reference reply Richard Richardson Salisbury Court Samuel Richardson says scene seems Shamela Sidney Colvin Sir Charles Grandison Sir Hargrave South Kensington story Thomas thought tion Tom Jones virtue volumes wife William words writes written wrote young lady
Popular passages
Page 5 - Half a dozen of them, when met to work with their needles, used, when they got a book they liked, and thought I should, to borrow me to read to them ; their mothers sometimes with them ; and bolh mothers and daughters used to be pleased with the observations they put me upon making.
Page 118 - ... by mistinesses from the head : by chance lively; very lively it will be, if he have hope of seeing a lady whom he loves and honours: his eye always on the ladies...
Page 29 - ... by all manner of temptations and devices, to seduce her. That she had recourse to as many innocent stratagems to escape the snares laid for her virtue; once, however, in despair, having been near drowning; that, at last, her noble resistance, watchfulness, and excellent qualities, subdued him, and he thought fit to make her his wife.
Page 118 - ... hand generally in his bosom, the other a cane in it, which he leans upon under the skirts of his coat usually, that it may imperceptibly serve him as a support, when attacked by sudden tremors or...
Page 155 - ... a woman. Thus it continued eight months, in which time my friends found as much love in Klopstock's letters as in me. I perceived it likewise, but I would not believe it. At the last Klopstock said plainly that he loved; and I startled as for a wrong thing. I answered, that it was no love, but friendship, as it was what I felt for him ; we had not seen one another enough to love (as if love must have more time than friendship!). This was sincerely my meaning, and I had this meaning till Klopstock...
Page 183 - AW WARD. COLERIDGE. By HD TRAILL. COWPER. By GOLDWIN SMITH. DEFOE. By W. MINTO. DE QUINCEY. By Prof. MASSON. DICKENS. By Sir AW WARD.
Page 90 - Why, sir, if you were to read Richardson for the story, your impatience would be so much fretted that you would hang yourself.
Page 73 - ... 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 107 - I, been born in a stable, or been a runner at a sponging-house, we should have thought him a genius, and wished he had had the advantage of a liberal education, and of being admitted into good company; but it is beyond my conception, that a man of family, and who had some learning, and who really is a writer, should descend so excessively low, in all his pieces. Who can care for any of his people? A person of honour asked me, the other day, what he could mean, by saying, in his Covent Garden Journal,...
Page 100 - 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 your's. His was but as the knowledge of the outside of a clock-work machine, while your's was that of all the finer springs and movements of the inside.