excerpt from 'Diary of Thomas Moore, 29 December 1818' pp. 244–245 (116 words)

excerpt from 'Diary of Thomas Moore, 29 December 1818' pp. 244–245 (116 words)

part of

Diary of Thomas Moore, 29 December 1818

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

244–245

type

text excerpt

encoded value

[David] Macdonald called upon me to go to dinner at Bowood; obliged to feel our way, not very safely, through the fog. Company at dinner: Lemon and Lady Charlotte (Lady L.'s sister), Dickinson, an M. P.; Abercrombie, Macdonald's brother, Sir James Mackintosh, and Charles Fox. Sat between Mackintosh and Lord L[ansdowne]. […] Music in the evening; all but Mackintosh and the elder [William] Macdonald attentive. They talked the whole time: I did not mind Macdonald; but I was sorry for Mackintosh. I said, when I got up from singing, “I see those two gentlemen like to talk to accompaniment,” which brought the rest of the company upon them, and they were put to the blush.

appears in search results as

excerpt from 'Diary of Thomas Moore, 29 December 1818' pp. 244–245 (116 words)

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reported in source

1593949167410

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