I can never cease to remember with affection and gratitude, so warm, steady, and disinterested a friend ; and I can most truly bear this testimony to his memory, that I never witnessed in any family more decorum, propriety, and regularity than in his... Some Unpublished Correspondence of David Garrick - Page 74by David Garrick - 1907 - 140 pagesFull view - About this book
| Great Britain - 1834 - 324 pages
...Abbey with such illustrious dust, and so many are desirous of testifying their respect by attending. I can never cease to remember with affection and gratitude...more decorum, propriety, and regularity, than in his, where I never saw a card, nor even met (except in one instance) a person of his own profession at his... | |
| 1834 - 566 pages
...in a letter written on occasion of his death, which took place in Jan. 1779, Miss More says : — ' I can never cease to remember with affection and gratitude,...more decorum, propriety, and regularity than in his : where I never saw a card, or even met (except in one instance) a person of his own profession at... | |
| Hannah More - Authors, English - 1834 - 492 pages
...Abbey with such illustrious dust, and so many are desirous of testifying their respect by attending. I can never cease to remember with affection and gratitude...warm, steady, and disinterested a friend ; and I can moi truly bear this testimony to his memory, that I never wil nessed, in any family, more decorum,... | |
| Theology - 1835 - 424 pages
..." — Vol. i. p. 82. No wonder that, after the loss of so excellent a friend, she should write, " ' I can never cease to remember with affection and gratitude...more decorum, propriety, and regularity than in his: where I never saw a card, or even met (except in one instance) a person of his own profession at his... | |
| Methodist Church - 1835 - 386 pages
...talents. It is, we believe,, more than could be said of any other actor that ever flourished : — ' I can never cease to remember, with affection and...more decorum, propriety, and regularity than in his : where I never saw a card, or even met (except in one instance) a person of his own profession at... | |
| Francis Jenks, James Walker, Francis William Pitt Greenwood, William Ware - Liberalism (Religion) - 1835 - 422 pages
...— Vol. i. p. 82. No wonder that, after the loss of so excellent a friend, she 'should write, " ' I can never cease to remember with affection and gratitude...most truly bear this testimony to his memory, that I nevet witnessed, in any family, more decorum, propriety, and regularity than in his: where I never... | |
| Samuel Griswold Goodrich - Queens - 1844 - 368 pages
...that warm and disinterested friend. Miss More pays the following tribute to his memory : " I never can cease to remember with affection and gratitude so warm, steady, and disinterested a friend ; I can most truly bear this testimony to his memory, that I never witnessed, in any family, more decorum,... | |
| Samuel Griswold Goodrich - Women - 1844 - 176 pages
...that warm and disinterested friend. Miss More pays the following tribute to his memory : " I never can cease to remember with affection and gratitude so warm, steady, and disinterested a friend ; I can most truly bear this testimony to his memory, that I never witnessed, in any family, more decorum,... | |
| 1845 - 440 pages
...to the personal excellence at once of Mrs Garrick and himself. ' I can never cease,' she writes, ' to remember, with affection and gratitude, so warm,...more decorum, propriety, and regularity, than in his : where I never saw a card, or even met (except in one instance) a person of his own profession at... | |
| English literature - 1845 - 864 pages
...cease/ she writes, ' to remember, with affection and gratitude, so warm, steady, and disinterestcd a friend ; and I can most truly bear this testimony...more decorum, propriety, and regularity, than in his: where I never saw a card, or even met (except in one instance) a person of his own profession at his... | |
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