The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, Volume 12G. Bell, 1897 |
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Page xx
... Church . The literary talents of the young secretary were beginning slowly to develope in the form of poetry , but Pindaric odes and poems in praise of Temple were certainly not the forms in which nature intended him to succeed , and ...
... Church . The literary talents of the young secretary were beginning slowly to develope in the form of poetry , but Pindaric odes and poems in praise of Temple were certainly not the forms in which nature intended him to succeed , and ...
Page xxi
... Church . He refused a clerkship of £ 120 a year in the Irish Rolls which was offered to him by Temple , and he at one time thought of accepting the chaplaincy of an English factory at Lisbon with which his cousin was con- nected . The ...
... Church . He refused a clerkship of £ 120 a year in the Irish Rolls which was offered to him by Temple , and he at one time thought of accepting the chaplaincy of an English factory at Lisbon with which his cousin was con- nected . The ...
Page xxiii
... Church wits , the world has long since formed its opinion ; but the fact that the burlesque was intended to ridicule the party who were incontestably in the right does not detract from its extraordinary literary merits . It appears to ...
... Church wits , the world has long since formed its opinion ; but the fact that the burlesque was intended to ridicule the party who were incontestably in the right does not detract from its extraordinary literary merits . It appears to ...
Page xxiv
... Church patronage . The united income seems to have been about £ 230 . The congregation at Laracor was not more than ... Church of leaving the duties of Laracor to a curate , but it is remarkable that he enlarged the glebe from one acre ...
... Church patronage . The united income seems to have been about £ 230 . The congregation at Laracor was not more than ... Church of leaving the duties of Laracor to a curate , but it is remarkable that he enlarged the glebe from one acre ...
Page xxv
... Church questions which chiefly determined his later policy were not here at issue . The evils of party spirit , the necessity of preserving a balance of power in the State , the opposite dangers to be feared from the despotism of an ...
... Church questions which chiefly determined his later policy were not here at issue . The evils of party spirit , the necessity of preserving a balance of power in the State , the opposite dangers to be feared from the despotism of an ...
Other editions - View all
The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift: The Drapier's Letters George Ravenscroft Dennis,John Henry Bernard,Jonathan Swift No preview available - 2023 |
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Page xxvi - To Dr. Jonathan Swift, the most agreeable companion, the truest friend, and the greatest genius of his age.
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Page 333 - ... his green boughs, and left him a withered trunk : he then flies to art, and puts on a periwig, valuing himself upon an unnatural bundle of hairs, (all covered with powder,) that never grew on his head; but now, should this our broomstick pretend to enter the...