The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, Volume 12G. Bell, 1897 |
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Page xiv
... certain that Swift received the best education Ireland could afford . He was sent when only six years old to Kilkenny Grammar School , which was then probably the most famous in Ireland , and which had the rare fortune of educating ...
... certain that Swift received the best education Ireland could afford . He was sent when only six years old to Kilkenny Grammar School , which was then probably the most famous in Ireland , and which had the rare fortune of educating ...
Page xxiv
... certain time he followed the example which was then so common in the Irish Church of leaving the duties of Laracor to a curate , but it is remarkable that he enlarged the glebe from one acre to twenty acres , and endowed the church with ...
... certain time he followed the example which was then so common in the Irish Church of leaving the duties of Laracor to a curate , but it is remarkable that he enlarged the glebe from one acre to twenty acres , and endowed the church with ...
Page lv
... certain - to believe that the Vanessa episode had come to her knowledge and had troubled her serenity ; and there is considerable , though not absolutely decisive , evid- ence that she was secretly married to Swift in 1716 . If so , the ...
... certain - to believe that the Vanessa episode had come to her knowledge and had troubled her serenity ; and there is considerable , though not absolutely decisive , evid- ence that she was secretly married to Swift in 1716 . If so , the ...
Page lx
... certain sides of the Irish character ; recklessly im- provident , with boundless good - nature and the most boisterous spirits ; full of wit and fire , and with a rare talent for versification . He ruined his prospects of promotion by ...
... certain sides of the Irish character ; recklessly im- provident , with boundless good - nature and the most boisterous spirits ; full of wit and fire , and with a rare talent for versification . He ruined his prospects of promotion by ...
Page lxxxiv
... certain that the disposition of her property was no sudden resolution , and it is equally certain that it was not made contrary to the wishes of Swift , for a letter by him exists which was written a year earlier , in which he expresses ...
... certain that the disposition of her property was no sudden resolution , and it is equally certain that it was not made contrary to the wishes of Swift , for a letter by him exists which was written a year earlier , in which he expresses ...
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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Æolists Æsop Alcibiades almanack ancient appeared astrology Athens Bentley Bickerstaff body brothers called Cardinal de Noailles Church common death discourse Edited endeavours England English Essay Esther Johnson famous farther friends genius give Greece hand hath head History honour humour Illustrations impeach invention Ireland Irenæus Irish ISAAC BICKERSTAFF Jack JONATHAN SWIFT King Lady late letters live Lord Martin means Memoirs Momus Moor Park nature never Nobles observed occasion opinion orators pamphlet panegyric Paracelsus Partridge party person Peter Phalaris Phocion Pindar political popular Portraits preface present pretend published reader reason religion revised Rome satire SECT Sir William Temple spirit spleen Stella Swift Tale tells Temple's things thought tion Tory Trans Translated treatise true critic tyranny vols wherein whereof Whig whole wholly word Wotton writers wrote
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Page xxvi - To Dr. Jonathan Swift, the most agreeable companion, the truest friend, and the greatest genius of his age.
Page 62 - As to his body there can be no dispute; but examine even the acquirements of his mind, you will find them all contribute in their order towards furnishing out an exact dress : to instance no more ; is not religion a cloak, honesty a pair of shoes worn out in the dirt, selflove a surtout, vanity a shirt, and conscience a pair of breeches, which, though a cover for lewdness as well ag nastinesa, is easily slipt down for the service of both...
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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...