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" This say I because I know the virtue so ; and this say I because it may be ever so, or, to say better, because it will be ever so. Read it, then, at your idle times, and the follies your good... "
The Rise of English Literary Prose - Page 367
by George Philip Krapp - 1915 - 551 pages
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Censura Literaria: Containing Titles, Abstracts, and Opinions ..., Volumes 3-4

Sir Egerton Brydges - 1807 - 912 pages
...because it will be ever so. Read it then at your idle times, and the follies your good judgement will finde in it, blame not, but laugh at. And so, looking for no better stuffe, than as in a haberdasher's shop, glasses, or feathers, you will continue to love the writer, who doth...
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Censura Literaria: Containing Titles, Abstracts, and Opinions of ..., Volume 3

Sir Egerton Brydges - 1807 - 456 pages
...it will be ever so. Read it then at your idle times, and the follies your good judgement will fitide in it, blame not, but laugh at. And so, looking for no better stuffe, than as in a haberdasher's shop, glasses, or feathers, you will continue to love the writer, who doth...
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The Gentleman's Magazine, Volume 86, Part 2; Volume 120

1816 - 832 pages
...it wil be ever go! Reade it then at your idle times, and tbe follies your good judgement will fnnlo in it, blame not, but laugh at. And so, looking for no better st-uffe, than, as in a Haberdashers shop, glasses, or feathers, you will continue to love the Writer, who doth...
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Mornings in Spring: Or, Retrospections, Biographical, Critical ..., Volume 1

Nathan Drake - 1828 - 360 pages
...because it will be ever so. Read it then at your idle times, and the follies your good judgment will find in it blame not, but laugh at. And so, looking for no better stuff than, as in a haberdasher's shop, glasses or feathers, you will continue to love the writer,...
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The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle, for the Year ..., Volume 178

1845 - 758 pages
...because it imU, be ever so. Read it then at your idle times, and the follies your good judgment will find in it, blame not, but laugh at. And so, looking for no better stuff than, as in a haberdasher's shop, glasses or feathers, you will continue to love the writer,...
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A Memoir of Sir Philip Sidney

Henry Richard Fox Bourne - 1862 - 588 pages
...because it will be ever so. Read it then at your idle times, and the follies your good judgment will find in it, blame not, but laugh at ; and so — looking for no better stuff than as, in a haberdasher's shop, glasses or feathers — you will continue to love the writer...
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English Language and Literary Criticism: English prose

James Baldwin - 1883 - 612 pages
...as they were done. . . . Read it at your idle times, and the follies your good judgement will find in it, blame not, but laugh at. And so, looking for no better stuff, than as in a Haberdasher's Shop, Glasses, or Feathers, you will continue to love the writer,...
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Specimens of English Prose Style: From Malory to Macaulay

George Saintsbury - 1885 - 432 pages
...because it will be ever so. Read it then at your idle times, and the follies your good judgment will find in it, blame not, but laugh at. And so, looking for no better stuff than as in a haberdasher's shop, glasses or feathers, you will continue to love the writer, who...
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Specimens of English Prose Style: From Malory to Macaulay

George Saintsbury - 1885 - 430 pages
...because it will be ever so. Read it then at your idle times, and the follies your good judgment will find in it, blame not, but laugh at. And so, looking for no better stuff than as in a haberdasher's shop, glasses or feathers, you will continue to love the writer, who...
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Specimens of English Prose Style: From Malory to Macaulay

George Saintsbury - 1885 - 432 pages
...in it, blame not, but laugh at. And so, looking for no better stuff than as in a haberdasher's shop, glasses or feathers, you will continue to love the writer, who doth exceedingly love you, and most heartily prays you may long live, to be a principal ornament to the...
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