| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - Poets, English - 1830 - 482 pages
...is owerte, like Erskine's, and yet not offending. " Yesterday, a very pretty letter from Annabella,f which I answered. What an odd situation and friendship...which in general lead to coldness on one side, and aversion on the other. She is a very superior woman, and very little spoiled, which is strange in an... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron, Thomas Moore - English letters - 1830 - 488 pages
...ouverte, like Krsk inuV, and yet not offending. " Yesterday, a very pretty letter from Annabella, f which I answered. What an odd situation and friendship...which in general lead to coldness on one side, and aversion on the other. She is a very superior woman, and very little spoiled, which is strange in an... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - Authors, English - 1830 - 528 pages
...ofieuding. " Vesterday, a very pretty letter from AmabcDa-t which I answered. What an odd situation ud R g aversion tlie other. She is a very superior woman, and ray little spoiled, which is strange in an heiress—... | |
| English fiction - 1830 - 812 pages
...letter from Annabella, which I an^ swered. What an odd situation and friendship is ours !—without cue spark of love on either side, and produced by circumstances...which in general lead to coldness on one side, and aversion on the other. She is a very superior woman, and very little spoiled, which is strange in an... | |
| George Gordon N. Byron (6th baron.) - 1831 - 576 pages
...ouverte, like Erskine's, and yet not offending. " Yesterday, a very pretty letter from Annabella, t which I answered. What an odd situation and friendship...which in general lead to coldness on one side, and aversion on the other. She is a very superior woman, and very little spoiled, which is strange in an... | |
| 1831 - 624 pages
...circumstance would have severely wounded Lord Byron's feelings ; in fact, he expressly says, in his Diary, ' What an odd situation and friendship is ours ! — without one spark of love on either side,' &c. ' Meantime,' says Mr. Nfoore, ' new entanglements, in which his heart was the willing- dupe of... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - English literature - 1831 - 620 pages
...circumstance would have' severely wounded Lord Byron's feelings ; in fact, he expressly says, in his Diary, ' What an odd situation and friendship is ours! — without one spark of love on either side,' &c. ' Meantime," says Mr. Moore, ' new entanglements, in which his heart was the willing dupe of his... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron, Thomas Moore - Poets, English - 1832 - 362 pages
...is ouverte, like Erskine's, and yet not offending. " Yesterday, avery pretty letter from Annabellaf, which I answered. What an odd situation and friendship...which in general lead to coldness on one side, and aversion on the other. She is a very superior woman, and very Httle spoiled, which is strange in an... | |
| Thomas Moore - 1832 - 378 pages
...popularity. As an author, he is very good, and his vanity is ouverte, like Erskine's, and yet not offending. «Yesterday, a very pretty letter from Annabella,*...answered. What an odd situation and friendship is ours!—without one spark of love on either side, and produced by circumstances which in general lead... | |
| William Brockedon - Europe - 1833 - 438 pages
...he often recorded. One instance in his journal is : " Yesterday a very pretty letter from Anabella, which I answered. What an odd situation and friendship...which in general lead to coldness on one side, and aversion on the other. She is a very superior woman, and very little spoiled, which is strange in an... | |
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