| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - 1793 - 268 pages
...life, spent with less severity and exactness than it ought to have been, he died with the greatest remorse for that licence, and with the greatest manifestation...christianity, that his best friends could desire. Life* I. 36. * Lord Clarendon was often heard to say, " that if he had any thing good in him, in his... | |
| English poets - 1801 - 488 pages
...spent with less severity " and exactness than they ought to have been, he died with " the greatest remorse for that licence, and with the greatest "...Christianity, that his best friends could " desire." Carew is generally supposed to have died young in 1B39, and I have therefore placed his birth about... | |
| 1802 - 522 pages
...equal, if 'not superior to any ofthat time: butins glory -was, that after fifty years of lib lile, spent with less severity or exactness than it ought to have been, he died with the greatest remorse for that licence, and with the greatest manifestation for Christianity, that his... | |
| George Ellis - 1803 - 474 pages
...or " exactness than they ought to have been, he died with the " greatest remorse for that license, and with the greatest " manifestation of Christianity that his best friends could " desire." Carew is generally supposed to have died young in 1639, and I have therefore placed his birth about... | |
| Lyre - 1806 - 208 pages
...dissipation to which he had too frequently abandoned himself. " He died (says Clarendon) with the greatest remorse for that licence, and with the greatest manifestation...Christianity that his best friends could desire." This happened in the year 1634. Now that the Winter's gone, the Earth hath lost Her snow-white robes;... | |
| Sir Egerton Brydges - 1809 - 912 pages
...spiced, were at least equal, if not superior to any of that time. But his glory was that after fifty years of his life spent with less severity or exactness than it ought to have been, he died with the greatest remorse for that licence, and with the greatest manifestation of Christianity, that his... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1810 - 562 pages
...only the laudable care he employed in bringing his verses to a higher degree of refinement than any of his contemporaries. His death is said to have taken...licentiousness of some of his poems, which, however, his editors have hitherto persisted in handing down to posterity. It does not appear that any of his... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1810 - 728 pages
...spread, were at least equal, if not superior to any of that time : but his glory was, that after ffty years of his life spent with less severity or exactness...licentiousness of some of his poems, which, however, his editors have hitherto persisted in handing down to posterity. It does not appear that any of his... | |
| Walter Scott - 1810 - 620 pages
...if not superior, to any of that time : but his glory was, that after fifty years of his life, speilt with less severity or exactness than it ought to have been, he died with the greatest remorse for that license, and with the greatest manifestation of Christianity that his... | |
| David Erskine Baker - 1812 - 472 pages
...spread, were at least equal, if not superior, to any at that time : but his glory was, that, after fifty years of his life, .spent with less severity or exactness than it ought to have been, he died with the greatest remorse for CAR " that license, and with the great" est manifestation of Christianity... | |
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