... and is kept with the same exactness and comfort as a private dwelling. Every member is a master without any of the trouble of a master. He can come when he pleases, and stay away as long as he pleases, without anything going wrong. He has the command... The Quarterly Review - Page 480edited by - 1836Full view - About this book
 | William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1836 - 602 pages
...stay away as long as he pleases, ivithoot anything going wrong. He has the command of regular servants without having to pay or to manage them. He can have...cleanliness and comfort of his own house. He orders just vvbat he pleases, having no interest to think of but his own. In short, it is impossible to suppose... | |
 | Original - 1836 - 456 pages
...away as long as he pleases, without any thing going wrong. He has the command of regular servants, without having to pay or to manage them. He can have...served up with the cleanliness and comfort of his own home. He orders just what he pleases, having no interest to think of but his own. In short, it is impossible... | |
 | 1836 - 1184 pages
...wrong. He has the command of regular servai without having to pay or to manage them. He can have \vhate\ meal or refreshment he wants, at all hours, and served up with 1 cleanliness and comfort of his own house. He orders just what pleases, having no interest to think... | |
 | Thomas Walker - 1850 - 332 pages
...up with the cleanliness and conir fort of his own home. He orders just what he pleases, having •o interest to think of but his own. In short, it is impossible to ,wppose a greater degree of liberty in li«ing. To men who reside in the country, and who come occasionally... | |
 | Peter Cunningham - 1851 - 382 pages
...stay away as lung as he pleases, without anything going wrong, lie has the command of regular servants without having to pay or to manage them. He can have...to suppose a greater degree of liberty in living." — Walker's Original. In the Library is a fine full-length unfinished portrait of George IV., the... | |
 | Peter Cunningham - 1851 - 390 pages
...stay away as long as he pleases, without anything going wrong. He has the command of regular servants without having to pay or to manage them. He can have...just what he pleases, having no interest to think of hut his own. In short, it is impossible to suppose a greater degree of liberty in living." — Walker's... | |
 | Peter Cunningham - 1851 - 432 pages
...stay away as long as he pleases, without anything going wrong. He has the command of regular servants without having to pay or to manage them. He can have...and served up with the cleanliness and comfort of bis own house. He orders just what he pleases, having no interest to think of but his own. In short,... | |
 | Peter Cunningham - 1851 - 382 pages
...as long as he pleases, without anything going wrong. He has the command of regular servants withont having to pay or to manage them. He can have whatever...refreshment he wants, at all hours, and served up with the cleauliness and comfort of his own house. He orders -just what he pleases, having no interest to think... | |
 | John Murray (Firm), Peter Cunningham - 1853 - 386 pages
...stay away as long as he pleases, without anything going wrong. He has the command of regular servants without having to pay or to manage them. He can have...of his own house. He orders just what he pleases, haviug no interest to think of but his own. In short, it is impossible to suppose a greater degree... | |
 | John Timbs - 1855 - 818 pages
...pleases, without any thing going wrong; he has the command of regular servants, without having to pay or manage them ; he can have whatever meal or refreshment he wants, at all hours, and served up as in bis own house. From an account of the expenses at the A thenteum in the ;e*r 1832, it appears... | |
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