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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Untitled Article
jr i ^ e ^ i ^ fM % S ^ thfi : P ^ WSt . ^ 9 r onents tbe ^^^ passed togQth& ? Mi fowner occasions--rslie conclude ^ ^ ^ j ing thai spmething fljpst be pfyxw 4 p «* r one way or andther , j $ cc / ' This gratified William ^ jh < Wgh , opt without a mixture of jlj ^ e pai nful passion of jealousy .
jjypich however was not so great jis to destroy the pleasure arising from this fresh token of her attachffnent to him . When in the evening he came into the Idtchen with features expressive / of an accession
40 his happiness , Goldsmith accosted him in jhese words , Su , Jp \ illiam ' y you have had a letter 4 irora Yprkshire—what does she S ?* y to }* yi ., come teli me all about i \ y ¦ " Ves , " ixturued William j * odding-his head , * I have had a letter from Iforkshire , but I shan ' J
tell jou Mr . Goldsmith auy thin » 5 t { x > at it ; no no , that will njever do , " " Well then , ** said Goldsmith after having put a few more questions wfcich were all negatived , " suppose IVilliamX tell you what the contents of the letter are , "
when looking upon a newspaper * vbich he had in his hand he adds , frame I will xe ^ Ayo-w your letter j ^ sjt as I find it here •/ ' \ Vhei > he re-ad ^ loud the Several wo rds of whi ^ h ithe letter was composed , with a fitgndy countenance and wirhenut tfee jle ^ slb fylhe xwg ' qr hesiitation !
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Will ym was tfiundBrstTOdc , > fe ^ came ve ^ y angry and exc laimed , ?< Xou ^ us » e ^ meiyery - iil Miy Gp / dsmith i you have 'ipj ^ n ^ d ; my leu ten Upoa ^ W » , <} ol d $ mith vm ^
mediately unravelled the difficulty hy telKng him tjiat he Winselfliad tjhe p receding ^ evening written the fetter , and t&us i » ade ^? por IVilU am believe lhat it was his wisest
way never to expect any opistfe -from his Dulci $ ea who had evidearly forsaken him nnd ought not therefore to be suffered for tbe time to come to disturb his repose J These , Sir , are the two atiecdatts
of the humour , and cheerfulness of Goj . DSaMiT * f , which I latel y received ( rom , Miss Afciltter , whei * ( d rinking , tea witlv her , and which 1 wrote dp \ in immediately on njy retur © home , Ho \ vev < er trivial
they may l > e ^ tbere are seme young persons itjo whojni fcfaey may prove acce ^ t afclo ^ They arfc ite * turally inquisitive respecting every particular in the history of a man , tp whom th ^ y A ' re , so much indebt ed ; for the perusal of his ** Gip *
cian and Roman Hislorie ^' of 14 $ cc Auinmtod Nature , * ' of h » 44 , Chinese Let » tecs , of his eKquii . site * f Poems , " mtist ha > ro confii b . uted in no small degree to their intellectual improvement . I am jBir , Yout %
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£ pt . ; ,. J ^ m ^ tJlMW *^ ^ erJ »« WM ^ v
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1808, page 204, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2391/page/32/
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