| 1856 - 634 pages
...a Centaur ; and the second is much like saying — ' Swallowed the loaf, gulping each morsel down.' Ward had greatly aggravated his offence by communicating...the author of the ' Table Talk,' Rogers confessed to having written this epigram, ' with a little assistance ' from Richard Sharp.' One day, he adds, while... | |
| Thomas Medwin - Poets, English - 1824 - 372 pages
...reviewed his book, " and said he wrote very well for a banker : — ' They say he has no heart, and I deny it: He has a heart, — and gets his speeches by it.' " " I have been told," said he one Sunday evening during our ride, " that you have got a parson here... | |
| Thomas Medwin - England - 1824 - 496 pages
...wrote " very well for a banker :- — . ••, t • • . - L ; • ' They say he has no heart, and I deny it : He has a heart, — and gets his speeches by it 5 •; ."•••• f. ; " I have been told," said he one Sunday evening during our ride, " that... | |
| Thomas Medwin - 1824 - 574 pages
...reviewed " his book, and said he wrote very well " for a banker : — ' They say he has no heart, and I deny it: He has a heart, — and gets his speeches by it.' " " I have been told," said he one Sunday evening during our ride, " that you have " got a parson here... | |
| Poets, English - 1825 - 422 pages
...and given it as his opinion, that he wrote very well for a banker : " They say he has no heart — but I deny it ; He has a heart — and gets his speeches by it." It has likewise been reported, " that, although Lord Byron was not ill-tempered nor quarrelsome, still... | |
| Alexander Kilgour (M.D.) - 1825 - 234 pages
...masters— which practice, if classical, is contrary to common sense. " They say he has no heart, and I deny it : He has a heart, and — gets his speeches by it," which Byron considers a sharp bone cutter. It in impossible to guess at his reasons for despising Milton,... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1825 - 238 pages
...masters^which prac. tice, if classical, is contrary to common sense. " They say he has no heart, and I deny it : He has a heart, and — gets his speeches by it," which Byron considers a sharp bone cutter. It is impossible to guess at his reasons for despising Milton,... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1825 - 582 pages
...et qui avait dit qu'il écrivait assez bien « pour un banquier : « They say he has no heart , and deny it : « He has a heart — and gets his speeches by it. » « On dit qu'il n'a point de cœur; je le nie : il a un cœur, « car il apprend ses discours par... | |
| Henry Erskine Head - 1831 - 106 pages
...Providence ensure this ? SON. What witticisms would not this occasion ? " Some say he has no heart, but I deny it, He has a heart and gets his speeches by it" This epigram, which I have seen on some speaker in Parliament, and a thousand things like it, would... | |
| 1841 - 618 pages
...overmuch ; for he would sometimes quote the well-known distich — ' Ward has no heart, they say, hut I deny it, He has a heart, and gets his speeches by it.' He admitted the point, and returned, as usual, a Roland for an Oliver. His review on Mr. Rogers's 'Columbus'*... | |
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