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The lounger08.10.1785
  • Datum
    Samstag, 08. Oktober 1785
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] them monftrouſly by and by, as Monf. de Sabot aflures us. My father is hardeſt of us all to be taught to do what he ought; and he curfed comi fo once or twice to Monf. de Sabot’s face. But my brother [...]
[...] do what he ought; and he curfed comi fo once or twice to Monf. de Sabot’s face. But my brother and my fifter-in-law are doing all that they can to wean him from his old cuſtoms, that he mayn’t affront himſelf before company. He fought hard [...]
[...] My brother, you muft know, has a mind to be a parliament-man, and fo he invites all the coun try, high and low, to eat and drink with him ; and fometimes I have been fadly out of counte [...]
[...] try, high and low, to eat and drink with him ; and fometimes I have been fadly out of counte nance, and fo have we all, when fome of his old acquaintance have told long ſtories of things which happened to them formerly, though ten [...]
[...] coufin to an Eaſt India Direćtor, and Sam got them in the evening to vifit the Principal of the college; and all this before Sir Harry Driver, Lord Squanderfield, and Lady Betty Lampoon. Then my brother is turned an improver, which [...]
[...] that way. In the mean time, however, it gives him a fad deal of trouble; when every thing is refolved upon to-day, ’tis a chance but it is all turned topfey-turvey to-morrow ; for his voters, as they call the gentlemen on my brother’s fide [...]
[...] her are not in the leaft fit for a country houſe ; and fo they are all taken down, and chintzes put up in their place. - - In the fame ſhip with the blacks, my brother [...]
[...] fong; and yet feveral of them I have heard coft fome hundreds of pounds. But this, between ourſelves, is the moſt plaguy of all his fineries. Would you believe it, Sir, he is obliged to be two or three hours every morning in the gallery, [...]
[...] with a little book in his hand, like a poor fchool boy, getting by heart the names and the ſtories of all the men and women that are painted there, that he may have his lefſon pat for the company that are to walk and admire the paintings till [...]
[...] that he may have his lefſon pat for the company that are to walk and admire the paintings till dinner is ferved up. And yet, after all, he is fometimes miſtaken about them, as laft Thurſday [...]
The lounger19.08.1786
  • Datum
    Samstag, 19. August 1786
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] the Hiſtorian of charaćter and manners (in which light a periodical author, to be of any ufe at all, muft be confidered), I am happy when I have an opportunity of recording any example of that more humble merit which other [...]
[...] when rather more advanced in life than moſt of the captains of the prefent times, who make fo fine a figure upon all occaſions, in their green, red, and white feathers, and whofe heads at every aſſembly rival thofe of our moſt faſhion [...]
[...] who eſteemed him the moſt were obliged to al low that his love of money (which they confi dered as a fort of difeafe) exceeded all bounds. His [...]
[...] His enemies, however, were forced to acknow ledge, that in all his tranfaétions he was perfećtly honourable, and that his love of money never led him to commit injuſtice. [...]
[...] brifkly about. The company were more and more aftoniſhed ; at length fome of them took the liberty to expreſs what all of them felt. “ I “ do not wonder at your furpriſe,” faid General W , “ and in juſtice to myſelf I muft [...]
[...] “ take this occafion to explain a condućt which “ hitherto muft have appeared extraordinary to “ all of you. You muft know, then, that I “ was bred a linen-draper in London. Early in ** life [...]
[...] “ pliſhed that objećt. The laſt packet from “ England brought me a full acquittance from “ my creditors of all I owed them, principal “ and intereft. Till now I poffeſſed nothing “ which in justice I could call my own. Hitherto [...]
[...] Statefman may be applauded for meaſures which are not his own, and a General or an Admiral may be indebted for all his fame to a lucky ac cident, which, “ without his ftir,” has crowned him with vićtory unmerited and unexpećted. [...]
[...] cident, which, “ without his ftir,” has crowned him with vićtory unmerited and unexpećted. But General W ’s merit was all his own, and ought to be rated the higher for this reafon, that it was notof that ſplendid kind which figures [...]
[...] diffipate their own money, and wafte that with which others have intrufted them, with all the fangfroid of the beſt-bred people of faſhion ; and we may meet with more than one man of [...]
The lounger10.12.1785
  • Datum
    Samstag, 10. Dezember 1785
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] ferved the kindneſs of a coufin, attended my wife wherever ſhe went, and made us immediately inti mate with all the company in the houfe. But the kindneſs had very near proved fatal to me. |- |- Between [...]
[...] that was to be feen in the neighbourhood, my poor nerves were perfećtly overcome; and though my wife was always telling me it was all for my good, I ſhould have certainly died in their hands, had they not at laft difcovered, that my wife’s [...]
[...] her arrival at Harrowgate, and in this unfortu nate interval my acquaintance with her began : So ſhe beftowed all her tenfion and irritability on me. It makes me quake when I think of her, Mr. Lounger ! and yet, though you will call it [...]
[...] 5th of Jan. next. They told us the town was quite empty at the feafon when we were there; but I am fure there was noife and buftle enough of all con fcience ; carts rumbling, coaches rattling, criers bawling, and bells ringing, from morning to [...]
[...] fcience ; carts rumbling, coaches rattling, criers bawling, and bells ringing, from morning to night, and fometimes, as my poor head felt, all night too. My wife, however, luckily found it very dull, otherwife we ſhould not probably have [...]
[...] Pantheon, the Dog and Duck, and the Swear ing-houſe at Highgate. As for genteel compa ny, he regretted exceedingly that almoft all his acquaintance were in the country; but promifed that when we came again he would introduce us [...]
[...] and I found it fome comfort, after all my diſtreffes [...]
[...] Garter, Colonel O-Shannon a Lieutenant general, and his friend Mr. M“Phelim a Privy counfellor. She makes all our acquaintance take notice how much better I am for Harrow gate, though, in faćt, I never drank a drop of [...]
The lounger13.05.1786
  • Datum
    Samstag, 13. Mai 1786
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] NOBODY will deny the fuperiority of the modern over the ancient world in almoft all the arts and fciences. But perhaps that fupe riority is not more obſervable when we think of . the articles of modern acquirement in detail, than [...]
[...] tifed as has fometimes been repreſented. Pytha goras, it is prefumed, like fome philofophers of our own days, choſe to talk for all the reft of the company, and enjoined filence to his fcholars, that he might have hearers ; but Socrates, who [...]
[...] a Treatife upon Education, that “ man has two powers, which give him the pre-eminence over all other animals, underftanding and ſpeech ; that the firſt is made to command, and the latter to obey; that underſtanding or mind is fuperior to [...]
[...] the modern idea, which is, that knowledge is to be acquired fully as much, or rather more, by fpeaking than by hearing ; and this rule, like all other rules of education, is to be attended to from the earlieft years. Mothers, who, accord [...]
[...] to forget altogether their being young, and to talk, with the authority of experience and the loquacity of age, in all places, public and private. Neither the Church nor the Playhoufe is to be excepted ; and in public exhibitions of greater [...]
[...] receiving inſtrućtion are neceſſary, at leaft in par ticular fituations and focieties. In the company of the great or the rich, which they are at all times to feek after and frequent, they muft liften with as unlimited affent, though not quite fo [...]
[...] who are rich may in fome cafes acquire know ledge very rapidly by growing poor. Adverfity, fays fome ancient fage, is the greateſt of all teachers; in fome of her fchools, however, people learn flowly, which was the old method ; in [...]
[...] who will never introduce any fubjeći, nor treat any fubjećt already introduced, but in fuch a manner as does not at all require being liftened to ; fo that every member of the party may with great eafe, and without any material injury, ſpeak [...]
[...] the Ladies may attain it–I mean by being mar ried ; which perhaps is the reafon why fome pru dent and oeconomical mothers defer all forts of inftrućtion till that period, except fome particu lar pieces of knowledge, which may tend to pro [...]
[...] justly deferves every reprehenſion a pen fo able as hers can infliéf. But her recital admits offo directly per fonal an alluſion, as, notwith/landing all its merit, tunavoidably precludes its infertion. Though the pistures which this work occaſionally exhibits, to be [...]
The lounger01.07.1786
  • Datum
    Samstag, 01. Juli 1786
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] neceffary to pay to me in my infancy. As I grew up, I became the fole objećt of my mo ther’s folicitude, and ſhe transferred to me all the affećtion which ſhe had borne to my father. I was not ungrateful for all this kindneſs; and [...]
[...] fcene. While we were admiring the beauties of it, fome accident fcared our horfes on the very brink of a ſteep precipice; and in all likelihood the confequence would have proved fatal, had not a gentleman at that inftant come [...]
[...] {tranger pleaſed me, his addreſs, and manner, and converſation, charmed me ftill more. In a word, Sir, I found in him all the graces of a Lovelace, all the virtues and accompliſhments of a Grandifon, all the fentiment and tender [...]
[...] twenty-fix, and found myfelf poffeffed of a for tune more than fufficient for my wiſhes, with a found conftitution, a difpofition to enjoy all the pleaſures of fociety, and a heart fufceptible of friendſhip and attachment. Soon after my [...]
[...] for one fingle weaknefs in my Louifa, which has occafioned much uneafineſs to us both, and will, I fear, if not correćted, embitter all our |- future [...]
[...] wife in her apartment diffolved in tears. Afto niſhed and affećted to the laft degree, I inquired the caufe with all the impatience of the moft anxious folicitude. At length fhe, with a look of melancholy that diftreffed me to the foul, faid, [...]
[...] I left her in a fituation which distreffed me at the time, and the reflećtion of which damped all the joy I ſhould otherwife have found in the ſociety of my friend. I ſhortened our excur fion, although I faw it rather difappointed him, [...]
[...] they afford him no kind of fatisfaćtion ; nor indeed do the complaints of thofe correſpond ents induce him to think at all unfavourably of that ſtate in which they have found the em D 2 barrafſments [...]
The lounger04.11.1786
  • Datum
    Samstag, 04. November 1786
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] Meanwhile the feafon paffed away; and though I met with a fufficient degree of atten tion at all public places, and though my coufin fpared no pains to fet me off to the beftadvantage, nothing like a ferious propofal of marriage ever [...]
[...] fentation, and then entered more deeply into the fubjećt of plays and of feelings. I cannot fay that I underſtood all he faid; but either he did not perceive my ignorance, or kindly wiſhed to inftrućt me ; and fo continued talking till it [...]
[...] “ man; you muft not therefore talk at random, “ and laugh, as you fometimes do. You muft, ** above all, be attentive to him, and do not ** engage in any idle talk with the reſt of the ** company.” When the day came, my coufin [...]
[...] own fituation added to my natural flow of ſpi rits, and forgetting all the prudent advices I had received, I yielded without referve to the difpofition of the moment, and was highly [...]
[...] grateful for the diftinćtions with which he had honoured me, and I was firmly determined to difcharge all the duties of a wife. - · Soon after our marriage, he carried me on an excurfion to England ; and as he wiſhed, he [...]
[...] quit him to look after my houſehold-concerns, he talks of vulgar cares and unfeeling folici tudes; though, at the fame time, with all his fentiment and refinement, he is by no means indifferent to the pleaſures of the table; and it [...]
[...] ALL this comes of not marrying a younger man. Had Miſs Martha (or Matilda, fince her hufband will have it fo) wedded one of the [...]
The lounger17.09.1785
  • Datum
    Samstag, 17. September 1785
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] houfe, who allowed that Handel could compoſe a tolerable chorus; a painter, who had made what he called Fancy-portraits of all the family, who talked a great deal about Corregio ; agentle man on one hand of him, who feemed an adept [...]
[...] had feveral female intimates, who feemed to have profited extremely by her patronage and in - ſtruétions, who had learned to talk on all to7tyn fubjećts with fuch eaſe and confidence, that one could never have fuppoſed they had been bred in [...]
[...] three weeks before. One or two of them, I could fee, were in a profeſſed and particular man ner imitators of my Lady, uſed all her phrafes, aped all her geſtures, and had their dres made fº exactly after her pattern, that the Colonel [...]
[...] < politeneſs is polite, that in fuch an opinion “they are perfećtly miftaken. Such a carica ture is indeed, as in all other imitations, the eafieft to be imitated ; but it is not the real « portraiture and likeneſs of a high-bred man [...]
[...] “ a theatre; now the theatre of your faſhionable “ world feems to me to have loft the beſt part “ of its audience; it is all either the yawn of O 3 ** the [...]
[...] “ copy of a larger metropolis; and in every “ copy the defećt I mentioned is apt to take “ place; and of all qualities I know, this of “ faſhion [...]
The lounger14.05.1785
  • Datum
    Samstag, 14. Mai 1785
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] “ DEAR SIR, Madrid, 27th Feb. 1785. I have been at all poſſible pains to diſcover, by means of thoſe philoſophers and travellers here who are beſt acquainted with Africa, whe [...]
[...] cording to the difference of times and feafons. - In his original ftate, he appears, as indeed it is highly probable all favages are, inclined to creep or walk on all fours ; and the habit of walking erećt or ftraight is only an acquired one, which [...]
[...] larged by conſtant ufe; whereas the longifimus dorf, by which the back is kept ftraight and erećł, was of no ftrength at all. The elevators alfo of the upper eye-lid, called by fome ana tomifts the muſculi admirationis, were capable [...]
[...] Phufalophagi fwallow either in its natural ſtate, or, like the Otaheiteans, in a ſtate of fermenta tion. Indeed, they do not at all reſemble the Iċ7huophagi, or Fiſh-eaters, in the circumftance of living entirely without drink, as they feem, [...]
[...] an illicit intercourfe with the other fex; but, on the contrary, like the Tartars and Tongu Jians, often preferred fuch to all others. The agility of this fpecies, like that of the Acridophagi, is amazing. That one whom I [...]
[...] could have been imagined of one in his fituation. He had, by the time I faw him, perfećtly loft all inclination and reliſh for his former manner of living, and was by no means averſe to the delicacies of refined cookery. His tafte, how [...]
[...] feeing and hearing are at fome times remark ably acute; at others he feems hardly to poflefs thofe faculties at all. Like the Chacrelas, in the ifland of fava, his fight is generally much quicker in the night than the day-time; and the [...]
[...] “ fits, they are extremely fenfible; and againft “ thoſe who injure them they bear a moſt im “ placable hatred.” The very reverfe of all this feems to be the temperament of the Phufa [...]
The lounger15.10.1785
  • Datum
    Samstag, 15. Oktober 1785
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] cafes, that I ſhall certainly recommend the book, and particularly the above-mentioned chapter of it, to all my young friends who are engaged in the ftudy of that dry and intricate fcience. I am per fuaded their imaginations will not be lefs, exer [...]
[...] court I was informed, that his office was a fort of chancellorſhip of matrimony, with the power of confirming or annulling all marriages, as in equity and good confcience ſhould feem to him proper; that this was one of the days appointed [...]
[...] The firſt perfon who came to the bar was a man of rather an ungracious appearance, and a coun tenance not at all exprefſive of good humour. He exhibited his complaint, and prayed for a diffo lution of his marriage on the head of deception in [...]
[...] a very devil incarnate; that fcarce a day paffed in which ſhe did not abufe himſelf, ill-treat his friends, and whip all the children round; and that he was obliged to change his fervants every half-year, except one old croſs devil of a cook- [...]
[...] nied any deception by which the marriage had been brought about, or could now be annulled; for that all her acquaintance could teftify how good natured ſhe was when ſhe was not contradićted ; and that before marriage her huſband had never [...]
[...] pregnant of her firſt child, it was apparent to every body : That, fubſequent to that period, his wife totally neglećted all attention to her ſhape and complexion ; and had ever fince been fo per fećt a flattern as to have forfeited all pretenfions [...]
[...] bring her to town, where fhe fpent as much mo ney in one month as it had coft her father to keep her all her life before; and aćtually wore, at this moment, a cap and feathers, the price of which would have clothed her for a whole year in the [...]
[...] of the other fex, or extravagant and giddy women of her own. And therefore, from all thofe cir cumftances, ſhewing the higheft degree of decep tion under which he had been inveigled to marry, [...]
[...] other man’s taking. To this complaint it was anfwered, on the part of the lady, that there was no fort of deception in the cafe ; that ſhe had all along declared ſhe did not care a farthing for her intended huſband, but on the contrary hated and [...]
[...] for the preſent, and the hopes of what a large jointure might procure for the future : That, therefore, all the finery, amufements, and ex pence, which he complained of, were only parts of the firſt claufe of the agreement ; and that, [...]
The lounger18.06.1785
  • Datum
    Samstag, 18. Juni 1785
  • Erschienen
    Edinburgh
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    Edinburgh
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] incidents, and its developement of the paffions, require a degree of invention, judgment, tafte, and feeling, not much, if at all, inferior to thofe higher departments of writing, for the compo [...]
[...] culties are at the fame time heightened by the circumſtance, of this fpecies of writing being of all others the most open to the judgment of the people ; becaufe it repreſents domeſtic fcenes and fituations in private life, in the execution of [...]
[...] fallen. As few endowments were neceſſary to judge, fo few have been fuppoſed neceffary to compoſe a Novel; and all whoſe neceffities or vanity prompted them to write, betook them felves to a field, which, as they imagined, it re [...]
[...] volence. - - I am not, however, diſpoſed to carry the idea of the dangerous tendency of all Novels quite fo far as fome rigid moralists have done. As promoting a certain refinement of mind, [...]
[...] quite fo far as fome rigid moralists have done. As promoting a certain refinement of mind, they operate like all other works of genius and feeling, and have indeed a more immediate ten deney to produce it than moſt others, from [...]
[...] duced or accompanied by Virtue. In the appli cation to ourfelves, in which the moral tendency of all imaginary charaćters muft be fuppoſed to confift, this nouriſhes and fupports a very com mon kind of felf-deception, by which men are [...]
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