Flim-flams!: Or, The Life and Errors of My Uncle, and the Amours of My Aunt!, Volume 3John Murray, 1805 - 9 pages |
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Page 23
... head of this gang . At the bar this prisoner was asked , why he had committed so many enormities ? shrugging up his shoulders , he replied , that he must live ! The Recorder said , ( as on a former occasion ) that he did not see any ...
... head of this gang . At the bar this prisoner was asked , why he had committed so many enormities ? shrugging up his shoulders , he replied , that he must live ! The Recorder said , ( as on a former occasion ) that he did not see any ...
Page 30
... was a most inhuman and unheard - of attack by THE REVIEWERS on his wic * !!! My Uncle modestly wore one proportionate to his head . * The EDINBURGH REVIEWERS , to begin the In all literary history ( exclaimed my Un- cle ) 30.
... was a most inhuman and unheard - of attack by THE REVIEWERS on his wic * !!! My Uncle modestly wore one proportionate to his head . * The EDINBURGH REVIEWERS , to begin the In all literary history ( exclaimed my Un- cle ) 30.
Page 31
... heads and such tender hearts ! But all this is not so ludicrous as it may appear , for such is the potent witchery of these HARLEQUIN - ARISTO- TLES , that they inform us Sir FRANCIS BURDETT has " presented Dr. PARR with a living ...
... heads and such tender hearts ! But all this is not so ludicrous as it may appear , for such is the potent witchery of these HARLEQUIN - ARISTO- TLES , that they inform us Sir FRANCIS BURDETT has " presented Dr. PARR with a living ...
Page 32
... head might be deemed , by courtesy , a wig . But it was the aforesaid Sir Francis . - I have little doubt they have , by the PRINCIPLES of their ARS CRITICA ! They are ALL HARLEQUINS ! Sir FRANCIS has just exhi- bited himself in a Roman ...
... head might be deemed , by courtesy , a wig . But it was the aforesaid Sir Francis . - I have little doubt they have , by the PRINCIPLES of their ARS CRITICA ! They are ALL HARLEQUINS ! Sir FRANCIS has just exhi- bited himself in a Roman ...
Page 33
... head without a moment's reflection , Every crooked hair stood opposite its neighbour , without order or connection ; and many parts were put together in so bungling a man- ner , that its beggarly caul popped out at every turn of the head ...
... head without a moment's reflection , Every crooked hair stood opposite its neighbour , without order or connection ; and many parts were put together in so bungling a man- ner , that its beggarly caul popped out at every turn of the head ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbé admired Apollo Aristotle ARIUS Arscott astonished ATHENAEUS attack Aunt Aunt's BOBTAIL BULBO CACO-NOUS called CHAPTER collector colour CONSTABLE CONTOUR CREEKORY cried critic curious declared dinner discovered discovery Doctor exclaimed eyes favourite FLIES flim-flams friends genius give GLUM grave Greek green peas grin hair hand head heard heavens honour horns Jacob jovial KILL-JOY kind ladies laugh laughter LENOX LIBRARY LENOX LIBRARY AUCTOR literary live look LORD LAUDERDALE Lordship lover mad lover Meconium natural naturalist never observed passion periphrasis perpetual motion pheasant Philos philosopher planet polyglot Polyphemus Presented in 1878 principle Professor quarter days reader replied my Uncle resolved respecting Review ribands secret shew Society sweet tain taste tender Tewkesbury mustard thing thought tion toad Too-MANY Uncle's URANIA vagrants vellum Vulgate whole wife wished woman write
Popular passages
Page 72 - Live you ? or are you aught That man may question ? You seem to understand me, By each at once her choppy finger laying Upon her skinny lips : — You should be women, And yet your beards forbid me to interpret That you are so.
Page 15 - He treated the physicians of his time with the most absurd vanity and illiberal insolence, telling them "that the very down of his bald pate had more knowledge than all their writers, the buckles of his shoes more learning than Galen and Avicenna, and his beard more experience than all their universities...
Page 35 - Tis not her birth, her friends, nor yet her treasure, Nor do I covet her for sensual pleasure, Nor for that old morality Do I love her, 'cause she loves me. Sure he that loves his lady 'cause she's fair, Delights his eye, so loves himself, not her. Something there is moves me to love, and I Do know I love, but know not how, nor why. Alexander Brome [1620-1666] TO HIS COY MISTRESS HAD we but world enough, and time, i This coyness, Lady, were no crime.
Page 84 - ... some years before my acquaintance commenced with it, and had been admired by my father for its size, (being the largest I ever met with,) who constantly paid it a visit every evening. I knew...
Page 25 - For example: shall we have concerts of music? The miserable state of mechanism of the majority of the performers is so conspicuous, as to be even at this day a topic of mortification and ridicule. Will it not be practicable hereafter for one man to perform the whole ? Shall we have theatrical exhibitions ? This seems to include an absurd and vicious co-operation.
Page 25 - All formal repetition of other men's • ideas seems to be a scheme for imprisoning for so long a time the operations of our own mind. It borders, perhaps in this respect upon a breach of sincerity, which requires that we should give immediate utterance to every useful and valuable idea that occurs to our thoughts.
Page 74 - And each particular hair did stand erect, Like quills upon the fretful porcupine.
Page 152 - For he a rope of sand could twist As tough as learned Sorbonist; And weave fine cobwebs, fit for skull That's empty when the moon is full; 160 Such as take lodgings in a head That's to be let unfurnished.
Page 85 - ... stuck to the tip by a glutinous matter. The motion is quicker than the eye can follow. I cannot say how long my father had been acquainted with the toad, before I knew it ; but when I was first acquainted with it, he used to mention it as the old toad I have known so many years ; I can answer for thirty-six years.