Eighteen maxims of neatness and order, by Theresa Tidy |
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Page 10
... means she will be better pre- pared to enter a cottage , should the changes of human life demand it from her ; and many a cottage has more true elegance than an ill - arranged villa . A young woman brought up in the lap of luxury is ...
... means she will be better pre- pared to enter a cottage , should the changes of human life demand it from her ; and many a cottage has more true elegance than an ill - arranged villa . A young woman brought up in the lap of luxury is ...
Page 18
Elizabeth Susannah Simmonds. providing a place for every article , and by that means enabled you to find it readily even in the dark . The necessity of a neat arrangement of letters , papers , and accounts , to ensure our safety , as ...
Elizabeth Susannah Simmonds. providing a place for every article , and by that means enabled you to find it readily even in the dark . The necessity of a neat arrangement of letters , papers , and accounts , to ensure our safety , as ...
Page 31
... means unworthy the attention of a gentlewoman . When the time arrives , in which she is placed at the head of her own table , it will be found an indispensable acquirement , though fashion has made it necessary for her next neighbour to ...
... means unworthy the attention of a gentlewoman . When the time arrives , in which she is placed at the head of her own table , it will be found an indispensable acquirement , though fashion has made it necessary for her next neighbour to ...
Page 38
... means unwilling to perform , being aware that a short visit is more likely to be acceptable than a long one ; and should any jealous critic suggest articles proper for dis- cussion , which have here escaped ob- servation , she will ...
... means unwilling to perform , being aware that a short visit is more likely to be acceptable than a long one ; and should any jealous critic suggest articles proper for dis- cussion , which have here escaped ob- servation , she will ...
Other editions - View all
Eighteen Maxims of Neatness and Order, by Theresa Tidy Elizabeth Susannah Simmonds No preview available - 2016 |
Eighteen Maxims of Neatness and Order, by Theresa Tidy Elizabeth Susannah Simmonds No preview available - 2023 |
Eighteen Maxims of Neatness and Order, by Theresa Tidy Elizabeth Susannah Simmonds No preview available - 2023 |
Common terms and phrases
appearance arrangement of letters Augean stable borrowed carriage chairs china cloth daily destination dismay drawer dress for dinner dry ink duties EIGHTEEN MAXIMS elegance faded ribbons fashion fat friend fire floor gentlewoman gloves Grave and Gay habit HATCHARD HATCHARD AND SON hints hopeless horse the rider horse was lost horse-shoe nail human comfort implement indolent jealous lady's large piano-forte luxuries Mamma Mary and Florence MAXIMS OF NEATNESS ménage ment Miss morning music in order nail the shoe neatly NEATNESS AND ORDER neces necessary never overtaken and slain perhaps person PICCADILLY pocket POOR RICHARD portfolio PREFIXED AN INTRODUCTION price 38 proper punctuality quire Remember require constant rider was lost right hand servant shawl shoe the horse shoe was lost sister sitting snuff sofa sometimes spare minute THERESA TIDY things TWENTY-THIRD EDITION unfortu Vide wait young Lady young Lady's young reader
Popular passages
Page 3 - ... for want of a nail the shoe was lost; for want of a shoe the horse was lost; and for want of a horse the rider was lost...
Page 27 - ... life's highest prize her latest hour ; That hour, so late, is nimble in approach, That, like a post, comes on in full career : How swift the shuttle flies, that weaves thy shroud ! Where is the fable of thy former years ? Thrown down the gulf of time > as far from thee As they had ne'er been thine ; the day in hand, Like a bird struggling to get loose, is going...
Page 42 - Take care of small things, and great things will take care of themselves.
Page 29 - Never remain engaged in a favourite employment longer than the duties of the day will allow; and recollect that there is often more true diligence in leaving off than in beginning. Refrain, too, from taking up a book, or even a newspaper, merely because it happens to lie before you, though unattended by any circumstance to render it interesting, as it induces a desultory mode of reading, and enervates the mind.
Page 20 - Acquire a habit of folding or rolling up. Many a fine print or drawing has been ruined, many a cloak crumpled, and many a shawl trailed on the floor, for want of this timely neatness...
Page 18 - ... no time is so completely lost as in hunting for lost things ; but that is so much saved, which has been employed in providing a place for every article, and by that means enabled you to find it readily even in the dark. The necessity of a neat arrangement of letters, papers, and accounts, to...