FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105  
106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   >>  
r man;" and he knew that it would not take one moment from that friend's remaining life, should he exert himself, with all due management, to obtain the elevated station when be should he no more. In presupposing the death of a friend, the dean, like many other virtuous men, "always supposed him going to a better place." With perfect resignation, therefore, he waited whatever change might happen to the bishop, ready to receive him with open arms if he recovered, or equally ready, in case of his dissolution, to receive his dignities. Lady Clementina displayed her sensibility and feeling for the sick prelate by the extravagance of hysteric fits; except at those times when she talked seriously with her husband upon the injustice which she thought would be done to him, and to his many pamphlets and sermons, if he did not immediately rise to episcopal honour. "Surely, dean," said she, "should you be disappointed upon this occasion, you will write no more books for the good of your country?" "Yes, I will," he replied; "but the next book I write for the good of my country shall be very different, nay the very reverse of those I have already written." "How, dean! would you show yourself changed?" "No, but I will show that my country is changed." "What! since you produced your last work; only six weeks ago!" "Great changes may occur in six days," replied the dean, with a threatening accent; "and if I find things _have_ taken a new and improper turn, I will be the first to expose it." "But before you act in this manner, my dear, surely you will wait--" "I will wait until the see is disposed of to another," said he. He did wait: the bishop died. The dean was promoted to the see of ---, and wrote a folio on the prosperity of our happy country. CHAPTER XXXV. While the bishop and his son were sailing before prosperous gales on the ocean of life, young Henry was contending with adverse winds, and many other perils, on the watery ocean; yet still, his distresses and dangers were less than those which Agnes had to encounter upon land. The sea threatens an untimely death; the shore menaces calamities from which death is a refuge. The affections she had already experienced could just admit of aggravation: the addition occurred. Had the good farmer, who made her the companion of his flocks and herds, lived till now, till now she might have been secure from the annoyance of human kind; but, thrown
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105  
106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   >>  



Top keywords:

country

 
bishop
 

receive

 
changed
 

replied

 

friend

 
prosperity
 

CHAPTER

 

sailing

 

prosperous


promoted

 
expose
 

remaining

 

improper

 

things

 

manner

 

contending

 
moment
 

disposed

 

surely


adverse

 

farmer

 

occurred

 

addition

 

aggravation

 
companion
 
flocks
 

annoyance

 
thrown
 

secure


experienced
 

affections

 

dangers

 

distresses

 
perils
 

watery

 

encounter

 

menaces

 
calamities
 

refuge


untimely

 
threatens
 

accent

 

talked

 

extravagance

 
hysteric
 

husband

 
pamphlets
 

sermons

 

immediately