The Life, Adventures, and Opinions of Col. George Hanger, Volume 2J. Debrett, 1801 - Great Britain |
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Page 26
... taken alive by force ; you cannot , therefore , think that a single highwayman can intimidate me : you have a very young appearance , and cannot long have made this business a prac- tice : tell me , therefore , your situation , and if ...
... taken alive by force ; you cannot , therefore , think that a single highwayman can intimidate me : you have a very young appearance , and cannot long have made this business a prac- tice : tell me , therefore , your situation , and if ...
Page 48
... to meet some kind fair one , I should have taken to my heels and run away as fast as my legs would have carried me . I have certainly been in some disagreeable situations in life i } since that period , but never , in 48 .
... to meet some kind fair one , I should have taken to my heels and run away as fast as my legs would have carried me . I have certainly been in some disagreeable situations in life i } since that period , but never , in 48 .
Page 76
... taken up and took his leave of the public . It is a pity they did not go a little higher when they were about it , Besides , he might be made useful , and brought over at a cheap rate ; for I do not think he would have the assurance to ...
... taken up and took his leave of the public . It is a pity they did not go a little higher when they were about it , Besides , he might be made useful , and brought over at a cheap rate ; for I do not think he would have the assurance to ...
Page 116
... taken with scandalous livers , and par- ticularly with the lords and ladies of sin- ful quality ; and that no man can be too plain and bold in exclaiming against and in correcting all immorality and Jacobin- ism of every sort , kind ...
... taken with scandalous livers , and par- ticularly with the lords and ladies of sin- ful quality ; and that no man can be too plain and bold in exclaiming against and in correcting all immorality and Jacobin- ism of every sort , kind ...
Page 123
... taken ill , a pair of breeches might be hung out of the window on a long pole ; if a woman , a petticoat ; and if she be taken in labour , a birch broom , If any lady or a pair of ram's horns . 123.
... taken ill , a pair of breeches might be hung out of the window on a long pole ; if a woman , a petticoat ; and if she be taken in labour , a birch broom , If any lady or a pair of ram's horns . 123.
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The Life, Adventures, and Opinions of Col. George Hanger George Coleraine,William Combe No preview available - 2015 |
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able acquaintance American army arrived attention attorney Bank of Faith bill breeches called Captain clothes Coleraine Colonel Commander in Chief confined corps costs creditors debt debtor endeavour England expence favour fleet Fleet Prison fortune frigate gave gentleman George Hanger give hand fast happiness Hessian highwayman honour horse hundred pounds informed island justice King's Bench King's Bench prison knew labour land liberty live London Lord Lord Cornwallis's Lord Rawdon ment morning neral never night officer opinion paid parish person pious pleasure prayer prison racters reader received regiment replied seduced seduced and abandoned sent shew shillings sinful age singular Sir Henry Clinton sixpence soldier South Carolina suffered surrendered test-oath thing thousand pounds tion tipstaff told took town tradesman trust walk woman women worthy writ Wyatt ye lovely Cyprians
Popular passages
Page 196 - Agree with thine adversary quickly, whiles thou art in the way with him; lest at any time the adversary deliver thee to the judge, and the judge deliver thee to the officer, and thou be cast into prison. Verily I say unto thee, Thou shalt by no means come out thence, till thou hast paid the uttermost farthing.
Page 160 - The husband also, by the old law, might give his wife moderate correction ; for, as he is to answer for her misbehaviour, the law thought it reasonable to entrust him with this power of restraining her by domestic chastisement, in the same moderation that a man is allowed to correct his apprentices or children...
Page 214 - ... and they shall be upon Aaron, and upon his sons, when they go in unto the tent of meeting, or when they come near unto the altar to minister in the holy place; that they bear not iniquity, and die...
Page 216 - Kingston, who is of that branch of business, to bespeak a pair; and to get him to trust me until my Master sent me money to pay him. I was that day going to London, fully determined to bespeak them, as I rode through the town. However, when I passed the shop I forgot it ; but when I came to London I called on Mr. Croucher, a shoemaker in Shepherd's Market, who told me a parcel was left there for me, but what it was he knew not. I opened it, and behold there was a pair of leather breeches, with a...
Page 214 - Exod. xxviii. 42, 43. By which, and three others, namely, Ezek. xliv. 18; Lev. vi. 10; and Lev. xvi. 4; I saw that it was no crime to mention the word breeches, nor the way in which God sent them to me; Aaron and his sons being clothed entirely by Providence; and as God himself condescended to give orders what they should be made of, and how they should be cut. And I believe the same God ordered mine, as I trust it will appear in the following history. The scripture tells us to call no man master,...
Page 214 - And they shall be upon Aaron, and upon his sons, when they come in unto the tabernacle of the congregation, or when they come near unto the altar to minister in the holy place; that they bear not iniquity, and die: it shall be a statute for ever unto him and his seed after him.
Page 214 - I hope the reader will excuse nty mentioning the word breeches which I should have avoided, had not this passage of scripture obtruded into my mind just as I had resolved in my own thoughts not to mention this kind providence, of God.
Page 213 - I mounted my horse and rode home : and he turned out as good an animal as ever was rode. I believe this horse was the gift of God, because he tells me in his word that all the beasts of the forest are his, and so are the cattle on a thousand hills. I have often thought that, if my horse could have spoken, he would have had more to say than Balaam's ass; as he might have said, ' I am an answer to my master's prayers, I live by my master's faith, travel with mysteries, and suffer persecution, but I...
Page 315 - I say unto you, whosoever you are, unto whom any one of the preceding characters belong, " ye are of your father the devil, and the works of your father ye do.
Page 215 - ... go naked; and so Israel found it, when God took away his wool and his flax, which he gave to cover their nakedness, and which they prepared for Baal : for which iniquity was their skirts discovered, and their heels made bare, Jer. xiii. 22. I often made very free in my prayers with my invaluable Master for this favour; but he still kept me so amazingly poor that I could not get them at any rate. At last I...