Letters, Sentences and MaximsChesterfield Society, 1850 - 348 σελίδες |
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Σελίδα 99
... dress is so , too . Why , then , should you be ashamed ? Why not go into mixed company with as little concern as you would into your own room ? [ Bath , Septem- ber . ] THE WELL - Bred Man . - Feels himself firm and easy in all ...
... dress is so , too . Why , then , should you be ashamed ? Why not go into mixed company with as little concern as you would into your own room ? [ Bath , Septem- ber . ] THE WELL - Bred Man . - Feels himself firm and easy in all ...
Σελίδα 104
... DRESS . - Take great care always to be dressed like the reasonable people of your own age , in the place where you are ; whose dress is never spoken of one way or another , as either too negli- gent or too much studied . [ Same date ...
... DRESS . - Take great care always to be dressed like the reasonable people of your own age , in the place where you are ; whose dress is never spoken of one way or another , as either too negli- gent or too much studied . [ Same date ...
Σελίδα 196
... dress , let all your motions be as easy and nat- ural as if you had no clothes on at all . So much for dress , which I maintain to be a thing of consequence in the polite world . [ Dec. 30 , 1748. ] A HAPPY NEW YEAR . - I send you , my ...
... dress , let all your motions be as easy and nat- ural as if you had no clothes on at all . So much for dress , which I maintain to be a thing of consequence in the polite world . [ Dec. 30 , 1748. ] A HAPPY NEW YEAR . - I send you , my ...
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Adieu ambition attention awkward bad company breeding Cæsar certainly character Cicero common complaisance consequently contempt conversation Corinthian order court dance degree Demosthenes deserve desire dress easy endeavor engage Englishman everything fashion father favor folly fool French frivolous genteel gentleman give good-breeding graces greatest Greek Harte heart hope House of Savoy inattention Julius Cæsar justly king knowledge laugh learning least letters live Lord Bolingbroke Lord Chesterfield Lord Mahon low company man's mankind manners mean ment merit mind minister Montesquieu moral nature necessary never object observe pany passion pleasing pleasure political proper Quintilian reason remember never respect ridicule sense shine silly Sir James Gray speak Stanhope sure taste tell things thought tion trifling true truth Viceroy of Ireland virtue Voltaire vulgar weak wish women words writes wrote young