I want you, and that however your business may depend upon any other, my business depends entirely upon you, and yet still I hope you will find your man, even though I lose you the mean while. At this time the more I love you, the more I can spare you... The Poetical Works - Page 15de Thomas Parnell - 1866 - 185 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Johannes Schiller - 1915 - 772 pages
...auch Parnell offen standen, zählt Pope in einem Briefe an Parnell (Mai 1714) auf: „Eustathius,6) with nine hundred pages, and nine thousand contractions of the Greek character . . ., Spondanus with all his auxiliaries, in number a thousand pages (value three shillings), and... | |
| 1916 - 742 pages
...„Eustathius,5) with nine hundred pages, and nine thousand contractions of the Greek character . . ., Spondanus with all his auxiliaries, in number a thousand pages (value three shillings), and Dacier's 3) three volumes, Barnes's 6) ') L. Lochner, Pope» literarische Beziehungen zu seinen Zeitgenosten.... | |
| Joseph M. Levine - 1991 - 452 pages
...Ireland, Pope's despair was genuine, although he hid it characteristically beneath a bantering letter. "The Minute I lost you, Eustathius with nine hundred...Character Arose to my view, Spondanus with all his Auxilliaries in Number a thousand pages (value three shillings) and Dacier's ^William Broome to Elijah... | |
| Joseph M. Levine - 1999 - 720 pages
...of my own Educating." When his assistant suddenly vanished for Ireland, Pope's despair was genuine: 'The Minute I lost you Eustathius with nine hundred...Contractions of the Greek Character Arose to my View — Spon39. Pope, Correspondence, 1:208-9. 40. For some opinions about Pope's ( '.reck, sec Johnson,... | |
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