The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, Volume 12G. Bell, 1897 |
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Page xv
... honour in Ireland , " " that my mind was like a conjured spirit that would do mischief if I did not give it employment . " The outbreak of the Revolution produced an immediate exodus of Protestants from Ireland , and Swift retired to ...
... honour in Ireland , " " that my mind was like a conjured spirit that would do mischief if I did not give it employment . " The outbreak of the Revolution produced an immediate exodus of Protestants from Ireland , and Swift retired to ...
Page xxii
... honour and virtue from which she never swerved in any one action or moment of her life . She was sickly from her childhood until about the age of fifteen , but then grew into perfect health , and was looked upon as one of the most ...
... honour and virtue from which she never swerved in any one action or moment of her life . She was sickly from her childhood until about the age of fifteen , but then grew into perfect health , and was looked upon as one of the most ...
Page xlvii
... honour to mingle with the blood royal of England and is the nearest branch of our royal line reformed from Popery . " Real Jacobitism he maintained was very rare in England except among the nonjurors , and the great bulk of the clergy ...
... honour to mingle with the blood royal of England and is the nearest branch of our royal line reformed from Popery . " Real Jacobitism he maintained was very rare in England except among the nonjurors , and the great bulk of the clergy ...
Page lv
... Honour , virtue , sense and wit ; Thus you may still be young to me , While I can better hear than see . Oh , ne'er may Fortune show her spite To make me deaf and mend my sight ! " Stella's temperament , indeed , was singularly serene ...
... Honour , virtue , sense and wit ; Thus you may still be young to me , While I can better hear than see . Oh , ne'er may Fortune show her spite To make me deaf and mend my sight ! " Stella's temperament , indeed , was singularly serene ...
Page lix
... honoured and popular centre of Dublin society , and also in the last sad years of old age and decrepitude . Delany himself has left an account of Swift's Irish life which is undoubtedly authentic , and which brings into clear relief ...
... honoured and popular centre of Dublin society , and also in the last sad years of old age and decrepitude . Delany himself has left an account of Swift's Irish life which is undoubtedly authentic , and which brings into clear relief ...
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.
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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...