Novels and Miscellaneous Works: With Prefaces and Notes, Including Those Attributed to Sir Walter Scott, Volume 4G. Bell and Sons, 1724 |
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Page 2
... received in England , and how they fell readily into business , being , by the charitable assistance of the people in London , encouraged to work in their manufactories in Spitalfields , Canterbury , and other places , and that they had ...
... received in England , and how they fell readily into business , being , by the charitable assistance of the people in London , encouraged to work in their manufactories in Spitalfields , Canterbury , and other places , and that they had ...
Page 10
... received not one farthing of assistance from anybody , was hardly asked to sit down at the two sisters ' houses , nor offered to eat or drink at two more near relations . The fifth , an ancient gentlewoman , aunt - in - law to my ...
... received not one farthing of assistance from anybody , was hardly asked to sit down at the two sisters ' houses , nor offered to eat or drink at two more near relations . The fifth , an ancient gentlewoman , aunt - in - law to my ...
Page 31
... received the mercy thank- fully , and applied it soberly , to the praise and honour of my Maker ; whereas , by this wicked course , all the bounty and kindness of this gentleman became a snare to me , was a mere bait to the devil's hook ...
... received the mercy thank- fully , and applied it soberly , to the praise and honour of my Maker ; whereas , by this wicked course , all the bounty and kindness of this gentleman became a snare to me , was a mere bait to the devil's hook ...
Page 34
... received , and it would be very hard that we should be tied by the formality of the contract where the essence of it was destroyed . I interrupted him , and told him there was a vast difference between our cir- cumstances , and that in ...
... received , and it would be very hard that we should be tied by the formality of the contract where the essence of it was destroyed . I interrupted him , and told him there was a vast difference between our cir- cumstances , and that in ...
Page 35
... received from a man , was all sense of religion and duty to God , all regard to virtue and honour , given up at once , and we were to call one another man and wife , who , in the sense of the laws , both of God and our country , were no ...
... received from a man , was all sense of religion and duty to God , all regard to virtue and honour , given up at once , and we were to call one another man and wife , who , in the sense of the laws , both of God and our country , were no ...
Common terms and phrases
acquainted allies answer army asked began believe brought called captain carried child CHRISTIAN DAVIES coach daughter dear desired discourse door Douay dress Duke of Marlborough Dutch Elector of Bavaria enemy England English father favour fortune French garrison gave gentleman Ghent girl give gone Hague hand handsome Harwich hear heard Holland honest honour horse husband jewels kind King knew lady Landrecy leave letter lived lodgings London looked lord madam manner marriage married Marshal Boufflers Marshal Villars merchant mistress morning mother never night Nimeguen obliged occasion ordered Paris pistoles poor Portrait prince Prince of Hesse-Cassel regiment resolved Rotterdam Rouen Roxana says Amy sent servants siege soon Spitalfields stay story surprised talk tell thee things thou thought thousand told took town Trans troops vols wife woman Woodcuts word