Select Works of Tobias Smollett ...: With a Memoir of the Life and Writings of the Author, Volume 1Carey, Lea & Blanchard, 1835 |
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Page 15
... oblige the public with this edition , which he has en - sician to professional eminence and wealth . deavoured to ... obliged to deny the validity of his reasoning . To a reader of a good disposition and well - regulated mind , the ...
... oblige the public with this edition , which he has en - sician to professional eminence and wealth . deavoured to ... obliged to deny the validity of his reasoning . To a reader of a good disposition and well - regulated mind , the ...
Page 23
... obliged to follow miscellane- ing friends , showed clearly the reliance which they placed upon his regard . Even his resent- ments , though often hastily adopted , and incau- tiously expressed , were neither ungenerous nor enduring . He ...
... obliged to follow miscellane- ing friends , showed clearly the reliance which they placed upon his regard . Even his resent- ments , though often hastily adopted , and incau- tiously expressed , were neither ungenerous nor enduring . He ...
Page 37
... obliged to your kind concern for Mr Pickle's interest , which I consider as my own , but I cannot bear to see you a sufferer by your friendship ; and , therefore , insist up- on exempting you from the fatigue you have borne so long ...
... obliged to your kind concern for Mr Pickle's interest , which I consider as my own , but I cannot bear to see you a sufferer by your friendship ; and , therefore , insist up- on exempting you from the fatigue you have borne so long ...
Page 38
... obliged to re- sign her authority , without enjoying the least pretext for complaining of her being de- posed . This disgrace was attended by a fit of peevish devotion that lasted three or four weeks ; during which period she had the ad ...
... obliged to re- sign her authority , without enjoying the least pretext for complaining of her being de- posed . This disgrace was attended by a fit of peevish devotion that lasted three or four weeks ; during which period she had the ad ...
Page 39
... obliged , in her own defence , to have recourse to some other contrivance ; and managed her artifices in such a manner as leaves it at this day a doubt whether she was really so whimsical and capricious in her appetites as she herself ...
... obliged , in her own defence , to have recourse to some other contrivance ; and managed her artifices in such a manner as leaves it at this day a doubt whether she was really so whimsical and capricious in her appetites as she herself ...
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Common terms and phrases
accordingly acquainted admiration adventurer affair affection agreeable alarmed appearance arrived assured attended began begged behaviour Cadwallader cern character circumstances coffeehouse commodore conduct consequence conversation countenance declaration desired disposition door Emilia endeavours engaged England enjoyed entertainment expressed eyes father Fathom favour Ferdinand fortune found means French French language friendship garrison Gauntlet gave hand happy Hatchway heart hero honour hope imagination immediately Jolter knew letter lieutenant lived lodgings look Lord lordship lover manner marriage master ment misanthrope mistress mortification never night obliged observed occasion opportunity painter Pallet passion perceived Peregrine PEREGRINE PICKLE Peregrine took Peregrine's periwig person Pickle Pipes pleasure portunity pounds present pretended promised proposal racter received replied resolved Roderick Random satisfaction seemed servant Smollett sooner spirit stranger tender thought tion told took Trun Trunnion understrapper valet whole wife young gentleman youth
Popular passages
Page 16 - Motteux, with no great abilities as an original writer, appears to me to have been endowed with a strong perception of the ridiculous in human character, a just discernment of the •weaknesses and follies of mankind. He seems likewise to have had a great command of the various styles which are accommodated to the expression both of grave burlesque, and of low humour. Inferior to Smollett in Inventive genius, he seems to have equalled him in every quality which was essentially requisite to a translator...
Page 20 - I would never desire a stronger proof of a bad heart, than a total disregard of reputation. A late nobleman, who had been a member of several administrations, owned to me, that one good writer was of more importance to the government than twenty placemen in the House of Commons.
Page 15 - Howsoever he may have erred in point of judgment or discretion, he defies the whole world to prove that he was ever guilty of one act of malice, ingratitude, or dishonour. This declaration he may be permitted to make, without incurring the imputation of vanity or presumption, considering the numerous shafts of envy, rancour, and revenge, that have lately, both in public and private, been levelled at his reputation.
Page 21 - But Anstey's diverting satire was but a light sketch, compared to the finished and elaborate manner in which Smollett has, in the first place, identified his characters, and then fitted them with language, sentiments, and powers of observation, in exact correspondence with their talents, temper, condition, and disposition.
Page 407 - ... stretching their extravagant arms athwart the gloom," conspired with the dejection of spirits occasioned by his loss, to disturb his fancy, and raise strange phantoms in his imagination. Although he was not naturally superstitious, his mind began to...
Page 16 - Smollett inherited from nature a strong sense of ridicule, a great fund of original humour, and a happy versatility of talent, by which he could accommodate his style to almost every species of writing. He could adopt, alternately, the solemn, the lively, the sarcastic, the burlesque, and the vulgar. To these qualifications he joined an inventive genius, and a vigorous imagination. As he possessed...
Page 15 - Let me not," says he, in the dedication, " be condemned for having chosen my principal character from the purlieus of treachery and fraud, when I declare my purpose is to set him up as a beacon for the benefit of the inexperienced and unwary, who, from the perusal of these memoirs, may learn to avoid the manifold snares with which they are continually surrounded in the paths of life...
Page 370 - A novel is a large diffused picture, comprehending the characters of life, disposed in different groups, and exhibited in various attitudes, for the purposes of an uniform plan, and general occurrence, to which every individual figure is subservient. But this plan cannot be executed with propriety, probability, or success, without a principal personage to attract the attention, unite the incidents, unwind the clue of the labyrinth, and at last close the scene, by virtue of his own importance.
Page 23 - The genius of Cervantes was transfused into the novels of Fielding, who painted the characters, and ridiculed the follies of life, with equal strength, humour, and propriety.
Page 11 - A very little above its source, on the lake, stands the house of Cameron, belonging to Mr. Smollett, so embosomed in an oak wood, that we did not see it till we were within fifty yards of the door.