| Henry Fielding, Arthur Murphy - 1806 - 444 halaman
...following -soliloquy : Yes, I will bear my sorrows like a man, But I must also feel them as a man. I cannot but remember such things were, And were most dear to me. - Adams asked him what stuff that was he repeated? — To which he answered, they were some lines he... | |
| 1820 - 450 halaman
...the following soliloquy ; Yes, I will bear my sorrows like a man, But I must also feel them as a man. I cannot but remember such things were, And were most dear to me. Adams asked him what stuff that was he repeated? — To which he answered, they were some lines he... | |
| Henry Fielding - 1821 - 846 halaman
...following soliloquy : " Yet, I will bear my sorrowi like a man, But I must alto feel them as a man. I cannot but remember such things were, And were most dear to me."—' Adams asked him what stuff that was he repeated? — To which he answered, they were some lines he... | |
| George Clinton - 1828 - 888 halaman
...weather, Where you, and eke your gentle queen, Alas! must perish altogether. CHILDISH RECOLLECTIONS. ' 1 cannot but remember such things were, and were most dear to me.' MACDITH ' Et dulces morions reminiscitur Argos.' — VmoiL. When slow Disease, with all her host of... | |
| Daniel Sandford (Bishop of Edinburgh), John Sandford - 1830 - 372 halaman
...that I woke myself from one of my poor slumbers, in a sort of self-expostulation, and repeating, " I cannot but remember such things were, and were most dear to me." I confess my weakness to you, and I confess it to be weakness. No one knows these things but yourself,... | |
| Daniel Sandford (bp. of Edinburgh.) - 1830 - 352 halaman
...that I woke myself from one of my poor slumbers, in a sort of self-expostulation, and repeating, " I cannot but remember such things were, and were most dear to me." I confess my weakness to you, and I confess it to be weakness. No one knows these things but yourself,... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1831 - 498 halaman
...guilty of, in giving vent to them."— Life of Byron, vol. ip 188.— ED. CHILDISH RECOLLECTIONS*. I cannot but remember such things were, And were most dear to me." slow Disease, with all her host of pains, Chills the warm tide which flows along the veins; When. Health,... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron, Thomas Moore - 1832 - 350 halaman
...past may still be thine, And bless thy future as thy former day. (2) CHILDISH RECOLLECTIONS. (3) " I cannot but remember such things were, And were most dear to me." WHEN slow Disease, with all her host of pains, Chills the warm tide which flows along the veins ; When... | |
| Henry Fielding - 1832 - 468 halaman
...the following soliloquy : Tes, I will bear my sorrows like a man, But I must also feel them as a man. I cannot but remember such things were, And were most dear to me. Adams asked him what stuff that was he repeated? — To which he answered, they were some lines he... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1836 - 354 halaman
...past may still be thine, And bless thy future as thy former day. (2) CHILDISH RECOLLECTIONS. (3) " I cannot but remember such things were. And were most dear to me." WHEN slow Disease, with all her host of pains, Chills the warm tide which flows along the veins ; When... | |
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