The Mirror: A Periodical Paper, Pub. at Edinburgh in the Years 1779 and 1780, Volume 3W. Creech, Edinburgh, and W. Strahan, and T. Cadell, London, 1781 |
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Page iii
... Melfort's . Hard drinking . Mr Umphraville's re- flections on modern manners , Pag - 10 77. The effect of difficulty in attainment to heighten our keennefs in purfuit . Argument deduced from this with regard to the rule of poetical ju ...
... Melfort's . Hard drinking . Mr Umphraville's re- flections on modern manners , Pag - 10 77. The effect of difficulty in attainment to heighten our keennefs in purfuit . Argument deduced from this with regard to the rule of poetical ju ...
Page 10
... Melfort is one of my friend Mr Um- phraville's early acquaintance , who continues to refide in this city , and of whom he still re- tains fome remembrance . That gentleman , in his youth , had applied to the study of the law , and was ...
... Melfort is one of my friend Mr Um- phraville's early acquaintance , who continues to refide in this city , and of whom he still re- tains fome remembrance . That gentleman , in his youth , had applied to the study of the law , and was ...
Page 11
... Melfort and her two daughters , there were three other young ladies who appeared to be intimate in the family . The male part of the company was ftill more numerous . fifted , befide our landlord , Mr Umphraville , and myself , of two ...
... Melfort and her two daughters , there were three other young ladies who appeared to be intimate in the family . The male part of the company was ftill more numerous . fifted , befide our landlord , Mr Umphraville , and myself , of two ...
Page 12
... Melfort's call- ing for their toasts , which he always diftin- guifhed , by defiring us to fill a bumper . Immediately after this ceremony was ended , they withdrew ; a circumftance which feemed nowife difagreeable to the company they ...
... Melfort's call- ing for their toasts , which he always diftin- guifhed , by defiring us to fill a bumper . Immediately after this ceremony was ended , they withdrew ; a circumftance which feemed nowife difagreeable to the company they ...
Page 13
... Melfort , as the " fignal is given , we may clear the decks , and " form the line of battle . " The Captain's joke was applauded with a loud laugh ; during which honest Umphraville , whofe face is no hypocrite , caft to my fide of the ...
... Melfort , as the " fignal is given , we may clear the decks , and " form the line of battle . " The Captain's joke was applauded with a loud laugh ; during which honest Umphraville , whofe face is no hypocrite , caft to my fide of the ...
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Common terms and phrases
accompliſhment advertiſement againſt almoſt amidſt amufement becauſe Befides bufinefs caufe cauſe character circumftances compofition confequence confider confiderable converfation correfpondent courfe defire difpofition drefs eftate Emilia faid fame faſhion father fatire fcenes feelings feemed feen fenfibility fentiment ferious fervants ferve feven fhall fhew fhort fhould fifter fince firft firſt fituation Flint fociety fome fomething fometimes foon fortune fpirit friends ftill ftory fubject fuch fuffered fure gentleman greateſt happineſs himſelf honour houfe houſe humour inftances intereft itſelf ladies laft laſt leaft lefs look Louifa mafter manners Melfort ment Mifs Juliana mind MIRROR moft moſt muft muſt myſelf natural neceffary obferved occafion paffed paffion perfons pleaſure poffeffed prefent purpoſe racter refidence refpect ſaid ſhe Sir Edward ſpeak ſtudy thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe thought tion town underſtand uſe Venoni vifit virtue whofe wife young
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Page 328 - Louisa sat down on a withered stump, leaning her cheek upon her hand. After a little while, the bird was scared from its perch, and flitted from the thicket. Louisa rose from the ground, and burst into tears ! She turned — and beheld Sir Edward. His countenance had much of its former languor ; and when he took her hand, he cast on the earth a melancholy look, and seemed unable to speak his feelings. ' Are you not well, Sir Edward ?' said Louisa, with a voice faint and broken. — ' I am ill indeed,'...
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Page 249 - I obliged her to be their advocate. I preferred, therefore, being silent on the subject, trusting that a little more experience and knowledge of the world would necessarily weaken their influence. At her age, and with her feelings, it is necessary to have a friend : Emilia had found one at a very early period. Harriet S was the daughter of a neighbour of my brother's, a few years older than my niece.
Page 75 - ... and its constitution is involved in that of England. At the time the two nations came to be so intimately connected, its great men were less affluent than those of England, its agriculture was little advanced, and its manufactures were in their infancy. A Scotsman was, therefore, in this situation, obliged to exert every nerve, that he might be able to hold his place. If preferment, or offices in public life, were his...
Page 324 - ... of the valley ; his daughter's lute was much beyond it ; Sir Edward's violin was finer than either. But his conversation with Louisa — it was that of a superior order of beings!
Page 323 - ... days it abated ; and, in little more than a week, he was able to join in the society of Venoni and his daughter.
Page 332 - Edward's whole tenderness and attention were called forth to mitigate her grief; and, after its first transports had subsided, he carried her to London, in hopes that objects new to her, and commonly attractive to all, might contribute to remove it. With a man possessed of feelings like Sir Edward's, the affliction of Louisa gave a certain respect to his attentions.