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Anastasia Amor, a former educator lives in Canada. She is a proud mother and pet mom. Bourbon Street Burn is the second Sommerville Suspense book.
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The letter of the 15th December was, according to Miss Berry s account, the last received by her, or her sister, from Lord Orford. It was the close. Berry and his daughters, with directions that Mr. Berry should undertake the care of a new edition of his works, with the addition of all the papers contained in that box. Miss Berry acknowledges, in a letter addressed to a friend at this time, that in making her father his editor and Mrs.

Darner his executrix, Lord Orford caused his papers being secured to her eye and mine, and made me his editor without the necessary publicity attached to the name. Miss Berry describes herself in the same letter as labouring with incessant perseverance for nearly a twelvemonth ; as neglecting all her own pursuits ; never looking in a book but that was conducive in some degree to the work she had in hand ; reading and rereading with perfect integrity of intention, both with respect to the author and the public ; and she adds that she is making all that part of the publication which depends on her selection as worthy of it as possible.

Messuage and outhouses, late in the occupation of Mrs. The edition published with the name of Mr. Berry was given to the public in the year The following memorandum was written at a time of great depression as to the prospects of her own country, but with Miss Berry s usual wish to bear some part in promoting the welfare, or extending the knowledge of her fellow-creatures ; it was probably the germ of that excellent work A Comparative View of Social Life in England and France, which appeared many years afterwards, and was the fruit no less of study than of personal experience and personal observation.

May 7, I am resolved for the future to make memoranda of the remarkable circumstances and characters that pass either immediately under my own eyes and knowledge, or that I can learn from such undoubted authority, and such accurate observers, as may satisfy even the steady search and unquenchable desire of truth which has ever existed in my mind.

It is my unfortunate lot to pass the most reasonable years of human life I mean from thirty upwards in times of universal fermentation ; when the minds of men all over Europe are undergoing some great change, and when some new system of social order is struggling into existence opposed by all the obstinate rancour of prejudice, and encouraged by all the heedless enthusiasm of novelty.

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My own country tottering on its basis, with every means of self-correction and principle of renovation within itself, in little more than a hundred years after its complete establishment, seems to the thoughtful mind but a new assurance of the impossibility of permanence to any institution of man.

In such times and such circumstances, my sex and situation condemning me to perfect insignificance, and precluding all possibility of my ever taking an active part, and then, like others, being misled and blinded by the part I have taken, perhaps I am but the more fit to record what I see. A very small fraction of the great and awful scene may fall under my cognizance ; but how.

Letters of H. Walpole not yet published. A certain number of Lord Orford s unpublished works have remained till now amongst Miss Berry s papers. The interest attached to all that fell from his pen has much increased, as fresh publications and new editions of his letters have made his readers better acquainted with his peculiar vein of thought and humour. They are now therefore given to the public ; and the close of the year in which Lord Orford died seems the fittest place to which to assign these last gatherings of his miscellaneous productions.

To Mr. From Cambridge, In the Style of Addison s Travels. Addison, whose method I shall follow. On 9th of Octr , , we set out from Lodone1 the Lugdunum of the Ancients , the capital city of Lombardy, in a chariot-and-four. About 1 1 o clock, we arrived at a place the Italians call Tempialbulo. By Time the founder s great design was crost, And Albula its genuine title lost. The church is an old K. Charles at Charing Cross. Here was some time ago an altar-piece of the Lord s Supper, in which 1 Dr.

Free to Read Articles from October Part 2 - Site Map - The New York Times

Fallens, hac qui te pingi sub imagine credis, Non similis Judas est tibi pcenituit. Think not, vain man, thou here art represented, Thou art not like to Judas he repented.


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From thence we made the best of our way to a town, which in English we should call Stony-Stratford, and corresponds with the description which Virgil has given of it vivo praeter vebor Ostia Saxo Stratfordi, Megarosque sinus, Tapsumque jacentem. Those that follow are little dirty towns, that seem to have been built only to be knocked 2 on the bead, like2 Expression ot Addison on this line. Antitheum, Glaucumque, Medontaque, Thersilochumque. The next town of note is Arc, 3 so called from its being built in the shape of a bow ab Eoo curvatur in Arcum.

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From Arc we travelled thro a very pleasant country to Epino, 4 whose forest is celebrated by Virgil in these lines : Sylva Epini late dumis, atque ilice nigra Horrida, quam densi complerant undique sentes ; Kara per occultos ducebat semita calles. Epinum s woods with shrubs and gloomy oak Horrid, and all with brambles thick o ergrown, Thro which few narrow paths obscurely led.

We were here shown, at a distance, the thickets rendered so 5 Gregory, famous by the robberies of Grregorio. My namesake hints at such man. See an one m those lines of his Ad. There step d up one to me I hardly knew, Embrac d me, and cried, Cousin, how d ye do. We lay that night at Oggerell, 6 which is famous for nothing but being Horace s Oppidulo, quod versu dicere non est. The ] ey s Wonwonders of Parvulun are in great repute all over Lombardy.

The account they gave of it is as follows : St. Bona being desirous to pass over the river, met with a man who offered to carry her over ; he took her up in his arms, and under pretence of doing her service, was going to ravish her ; but she praying to the Virgin Mary for help, the wretch fell into the stream and was drowned, and immediately this bridge rose out of the water for her to go over. She was so touched by this signal deliverance, that she would not leave the place, but continued there till her death in exercises of devotion, and was buried in a little chapel at the foot of the bridge, with her story at length and this epitaph Hac sita sunt fossa Bonae venerabilis ossa!

Novum Forum of lockius , where are held the greatest races in ket. We were shown in the treasury of the Benedictines Convent, an ancient gold cup which cost an hundred guineas a great sum in those days , and given, as the friar told us that attended us, by a certain German Prince, he did not very well know who, but he believed his name was one King George.

The inhabitants are wonderfully fond of horses, and to this day tell you most surprising stories of one Looby, a Boltognian. They are very dangerous precipices, and Gogmagog occasioned the famous verse- u incj jj t in Scylla Incidit in Gogum qui vult vitare Magogon. Pavia and its University are described by Mr. Addison, so I shall only mention a circumstance which I wonder escaped that learned gentleman.

It is the name of the town, which is derived from the badness of the streets : Pavia a non pavendo, as Lucus a non lucendo. Till next post, adieu! To the Hon. Henry afterwards Marshal Conway. London, October 81, You have already had accounts, I suppose, of the former from Lady Caroline and Mr. Selwyn, but I will say my bit about it too ; I told Lady Caroline I would ; besides, I made a list of most of the people, and will tell you some of the company, which was all extremely good ; there were none but people of the first fashion, except Mr.

Kent, Mr. Gibber, Mr. Irving, and the Parsons family, and you know all these have an alloy. There are already two hundred invited, from Miss in bib and apron to my Lord Chancellor Hardwicke in bib and mace. There were an hundred and ninety-seven people, yet no confusion ; he had taken off all the doors of his house, and, in short, distributed everybody quite to their wellbeing.

For the rest of the company you shall see the list when you come to town. Lord and Lady Euston and Lady Caroline did not dance. A supper for the lady dancers was served at twelve, their partners and waiting tables with other supper stood behind.

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I danced country dances, I had forgot myself. The ball ended at four. Now for the birthday. There were loads of men, not many ladies, nor much finery.