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)
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[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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