THE LIFE OF SAMUEL JOHNSON, LL.D1892 |
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Page 36
... humour and perpetual cheerfulness. He has better faculties than I had imagined ; more justice of discernment, and more fecundity of images. It is very convenient to travel with him ; for there is no house where he is not received with ...
... humour and perpetual cheerfulness. He has better faculties than I had imagined ; more justice of discernment, and more fecundity of images. It is very convenient to travel with him ; for there is no house where he is not received with ...
Page 47
... humour, said, " I should have expected to have heard a Latin grace, among so many learned men : we had always a Latin grace at Oxford. I believe I can repeat it." Which he did, as giving the learned men in one place a specimen of what ...
... humour, said, " I should have expected to have heard a Latin grace, among so many learned men : we had always a Latin grace at Oxford. I believe I can repeat it." Which he did, as giving the learned men in one place a specimen of what ...
Page 57
... humour naturally, it is scarce a virtue." Boswell. " They were afraid of you, Sir, as it was you who proposed me." Johnson. " Sir, they knew, that if they refused you, they'd probably never have got in another. I'd have kept them all ...
... humour naturally, it is scarce a virtue." Boswell. " They were afraid of you, Sir, as it was you who proposed me." Johnson. " Sir, they knew, that if they refused you, they'd probably never have got in another. I'd have kept them all ...
Page 72
... humour : so that it was not easy to talk to his satisfaction. We sat contentedly at our inn. He then became merry, and observed how little we had either heard or said at Aberdeen ; that the Aberdonians had not started a single mawkin ...
... humour : so that it was not easy to talk to his satisfaction. We sat contentedly at our inn. He then became merry, and observed how little we had either heard or said at Aberdeen ; that the Aberdonians had not started a single mawkin ...
Page 80
... humour. Lady Errol had given each of us a copy of an ode by Beattie, on the birth of her son, Lord Hay. Mr. Boyd asked Dr. Johnson how he liked it. Dr. Johnson, who did not admire it, got off very well, by taking it out, and reading the ...
... humour. Lady Errol had given each of us a copy of an ode by Beattie, on the birth of her son, Lord Hay. Mr. Boyd asked Dr. Johnson how he liked it. Dr. Johnson, who did not admire it, got off very well, by taking it out, and reading the ...
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