Mr. Oddity, Samuel Johnson, LL.D.Bell Publishing Company, 1951 - 348 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 29
... morning , I was told by her of the two places to which the inhabitants of this world were received after death ; one a fine place filled with happiness , called Heaven ; the other a sad place , called Hell . That this account much ...
... morning , I was told by her of the two places to which the inhabitants of this world were received after death ; one a fine place filled with happiness , called Heaven ; the other a sad place , called Hell . That this account much ...
Page 140
... morning , and still not ready for bed , decided to get Johnson to join them . To the Temple they went , and rapped on the door of his chambers . At last he appeared , not in a nightcap , but in his shirt , with his little black wig on ...
... morning , and still not ready for bed , decided to get Johnson to join them . To the Temple they went , and rapped on the door of his chambers . At last he appeared , not in a nightcap , but in his shirt , with his little black wig on ...
Page 240
... morning he came down to the breakfast room early , and found no one about . The next morning he came down late , which Mrs. Thrale remarked . " Madam , " he said , “ I do not like to come down to vacuity . " Over breakfast they ...
... morning he came down to the breakfast room early , and found no one about . The next morning he came down late , which Mrs. Thrale remarked . " Madam , " he said , “ I do not like to come down to vacuity . " Over breakfast they ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards appeared Ashbourne asked Barber Baretti Beauclerk believe Bennet Langton Bolt Court bookseller Boothby Boswell's called conversation David Garrick dear Sir death diary Dictionary Dilly dined dinner English exclaimed Fanny Burney father Fleet Street Francis Barber Garrick gentleman Goldsmith hand Hawkins hear heard Henry Thrale honor hope Inner Temple James Boswell Johnson told Johnson wrote journey lady Lane Langton learned letter Levet Lichfield Lichfield Grammar School lived London Lord Lucy Porter Madam Michael Johnson mind Miss Burney Miss Williams morning mother Murphy never night once Oxford perhaps Piozzi pleasure poem poet poetry Pope praise prayed prayer Queeney remarked replied returned Reynolds Richard Savage Samuel Johnson Scotland Shakespeare stayed Streatham sure talk tell Tetty thought Thrale tion told Boswell took wife Wilkes wish woman write young