minerva has adopted no words, looked up 0 words, created 2 lists, listed 599 words, written 292 comments, added 0 tags, and loved 0 words.

Comments by minerva

  • I was also disappointed by Spike's absence. And Lucy is missing, too. She was his number one kissing partner!

    December 14, 2007

  • Dear creature!-- Did she never romp? Did she never from girlhood to now, hoyden?

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 13, 2007

  • And yet the moment I beheld her, my heart was dastardized, damped, and reverenced-over.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 13, 2007

  • She has a high opinion of her sex, to think they can charm so long, with a man so well acquainted with their identicalness.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 13, 2007

  • The next letter is of such a nature, that I dare say these proud varletesses would not have had it fall into my hands for the world.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 13, 2007

  • Yet my teasing ways, it seems, are intolerable-- Are women only to tease, I trow?

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 13, 2007

  • I have great temptations, on this occasion, says the prim Gothamite, to express my own resentments upon your present state.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 13, 2007

  • Can also mean a fool, from the English village of Gotham, proverbially known for its fools.

    Don't write me!

    December 13, 2007

  • A form of gauntlet.

    December 13, 2007

  • What a gantlope would she run, when I had done with her, among a dozen of her own pitiless sex...

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 13, 2007

  • Melancholy for what?... I thought thou hadst been more of a man; thou that are not afraid of an acute death, a sword's point, to be so plaguily hypped at the consequences of a chronical one?

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • Hypochondria, low spirits, depression, melancholy.

    December 11, 2007

  • If I ruin such a virtue, sayest thou?-- Eternal monotonist!

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • ...I am amazed at the repetition of thy wambling nonsense.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • Thou mayest by trick, chicane, and false colours, thou who art worse than a pickeroon in love, overcome a poor lady so entangled as thou hast entangled her...

    Belford to Lovelace, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • His clenched fist offered to his forehead on your leaving him in just displeasure; I wish it had been a poleaxe, and in the hand of his worst enemy.

    Anna Howe to Clarissa Harlowe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • Yet I believe you must not expect him to be honest on this side of his grand climacteric.

    Anna Howe to Clarissa Harlowe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • I am glad she wept so much, because no heart bursts (be the occasion for the sorrow what it will) which has that kindly relief. Hence I hardly ever am moved at the sight of these pellucid fugitives in a fine woman.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • Confoundedly out of humour with this perverse lady.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • Miss Howe is a charming creature too; but confoundedly smart, and spiritful. I am a good deal afraid of her.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • For, Belford ('tis a folly to deny it), I have been, to use an old word, quite bestraught.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • How came she (thought I at the instant) by all this penetration? My devil surely does not play me booty. If I thought he did, I would marry and live honest, to be even with him.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 11, 2007

  • Also: to play (someone) booty: to act falsely (against someone) for gain.

    December 11, 2007

  • She can keep nothing from her daughter, though they are always jangling.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • Thank you very much! I'm just doing my part to get as many people as possible to read this great book.

    December 10, 2007

  • Your brother having been assured that you are not married, has taken a resolution to find you out, way-lay you and carry you off.

    Anna Howe to Clarissa Harlowe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • A female mediator.

    December 10, 2007

  • And who shall put her to this trial?-- Who but the man who has, as she thinks, already induced her in lesser points to swerve?

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • ...how shall I tell him that all his compliments are misbestowed...

    Clarissa Harlowe to Anna Howe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • Also adj.: diverse, various

    December 10, 2007

  • The dog sat uneasy: he shifted his feet: her eye was upon him; he was therefore, after the rebuff he had met with, afraid to look at me for my motions; and now turned his eyes towards me, then from me, as if he would unlook his own looks...

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • ...and since he thought it necessary to tell the people below anything about me, I insisted that he should unsay all he had said, and tell them the truth.

    Clarissa Harlowe to Anna Howe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • And will it not moreover give him pretence and excuse oftener than ever to pad-nag it hither to good Mrs Howe's fair daughter?

    Anna Howe to Clarissa Harlowe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • See also padnag.

    December 10, 2007

  • Mrs Howe was acted by the springs I set at work: her daughter was moving for me, and yet imagined herself plumb against me...

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • Think not of corresponding with a wretch who now seems absolutely devoted! How can it be otherwise, if a parent's curses have the weight I always attributed to them...

    Clarissa Harlowe to Anna Howe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • This correspondence was prohibited before, and that, to the daughter, in the strongest terms: but yet carried on by both: although a brace of impeccables, and please ye.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • A person afflicted with gout in the foot.

    December 10, 2007

  • I was the willinger to suspend my journey thither, till I heard from Harlowe Place.

    Clarissa Harlowe to Anna Howe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 10, 2007

  • Who can have patience with such fellows and fellowesses?

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 9, 2007

  • All I had to apprehend was that a daughter so reluctantly carried off would offer terms to her father, and would be accepted upon a mutual concedence; they to give up Solmes; she to give up me.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 9, 2007

  • Enough.

    December 9, 2007

  • =am not. See also ain't.

    December 9, 2007

  • Whole hecatombs ought to be offered up to the manes of my Clarissa Lovelace.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 8, 2007

  • Tomorrow is the day that will, in all probability, send either one or two ghosts to attend the manes of my Clarissa.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 8, 2007

  • Whole hecatombs ought to be offered up to the manes of my Clarissa Lovelace.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 8, 2007

  • Why doesn't reesetee appear on one of reesetee's lists?

    December 7, 2007

  • John,

    Could we have a feature that would tell us how often a word or a list has been listed as a favorite by members? I only see favorite lists on the individual profiles. I don't know if it's feasible for favorite words, but I think it could work with lists.

    December 6, 2007

  • Your sightliness of person may perhaps make some think this alliance disparaging. But I hope you won't put such a personal value upon yourself...

    Mrs. Harlowe to Clarissa Harlowe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 5, 2007

  • The other seven seemed to have been just up, risen perhaps from their customers in the fore-house, and their nocturnal orgies, with faces, three or four of them, that had run, the paint lying in streaky seams not half blowzed off, discovering coarse wrinkled skins...

    Belford to Lovelace, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 5, 2007

  • ruddy-faced, high-colored (from wind or sun); also disheveled, disordered

    December 5, 2007

  • Then, if these somnivolences (I hate the word opiates on this occasion) have turned her head, that is an effect they frequently have upon some constitutions; and in this case was rather the fault of the dose, than the design of the giver.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 5, 2007

  • But for a wife to come up with a kemboed arm, the other hand thrown out, perhaps with a pointing finger--- 'Look ye here, Sir!--- Take notice!...'

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 5, 2007

  • See akimbo

    December 5, 2007

  • Allow me a little rhodomontade, Jack!...

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 4, 2007

  • Never was there such a pair of scribbling lovers as we--- yet perhaps whom it so much concerns to keep from each other what each writes.

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 4, 2007

  • And hence you concluded, that could this consentaneousness, as you called it, of corporal and animal faculties be pointed by discretion; that is to say, could his vivacity be confined within the pale of but moral obligations; he would be far from being rejectible as a companion for life.

    Clarissa Harlowe to Anna Howe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 4, 2007

  • But my brother and sister have such an influence over everybody, and are so determined; so pique themselves upon subduing me and carrying their point; that I despair that they will...

    Clarissa Harlowe to Anna Howe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 4, 2007

  • Then who says Miss Clarissa Harlowe is the paragon of virtue? Is virtue itself?

    All who know her, and have heard of her, it will be answered.

    Common bruit!--- Is virtue to be established by common bruit only?...

    Lovelace to Belford, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 4, 2007

  • Also a noun (archaic).

    December 4, 2007

  • Also a widow.

    December 4, 2007

  • Keep it coming, Sire!

    December 4, 2007

  • This list is wonderful, i'n't it?

    December 4, 2007

  • A youngster; see also younker

    December 4, 2007

  • A stander-by may see more of the game than one that plays.

    Anna Howe to Clarissa Harlowe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    December 4, 2007

  • Greetings, Seanahan:

    Intelligencer, apart from featuring as the title of certain newspapers, can also mean an informer or spy.

    November 29, 2007

  • You don't know how many times I thought this was a typo for forward...

    November 29, 2007

  • She says I am too witty; Anglice, too pert: I, that she is too wise; that is to say, being likewise put into English, not so young as she has been: in short, is grown so much into mother, she has forgotten she ever was a daughter.

    Anna Howe, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    November 28, 2007

  • Also a spy:

    He owns, 'that he has an intelligencer in our family; who has failed him for a day or two past: and not knowing how I do, or how I may be treated, his anxiety is the greater.'

    Clarissa Harlowe quoting Lovelace, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson

    November 28, 2007

  • Also such language; calumny.

    Complaining, as he did, in a half-menacing strain, of the obloquies raised against him--- 'That if he were innocent, he should despise the obloquy; if not, revenge would not wipe off his guilt.'

    Clarissa Harlowe quoting Lovelace, Clarissa by Samuel Richardson.

    November 28, 2007

  • Also choke pear

    November 27, 2007

  • Why, indeed, said my brother with an air of college-sufficiency, with which he abounds (for he thinks nobody writes like himself), I believe I have given her a choke-pear. What say you, Mr Solmes?

    November 27, 2007

  • Bless me! said she, how soon these fine young ladies will be put into flusterations!

    November 27, 2007

  • "Only this, miss, that your stomachfulness had swallowed up your stomach; and that obstinancy was meat, drink, and cloth to you."

    November 27, 2007

  • Compare Oons (also God's wounds)

    October 11, 2007

  • But of this he should say the less, as it were much better to justify himself by his actions than by the most solemn asservations and promises...

    October 11, 2007

  • Or "sammich."

    October 11, 2007

  • I know not why a good wife should be above these things. 'Tis better than lying abed half the day, and junketing and card-playing all the night...

    October 11, 2007

  • For: is not, isn't

    October 11, 2007

  • Plain speaking (The road from London to Dunstable stretched for the most part in a straight, direct line.)

    October 11, 2007

  • How you begin your letter!---Because I value Mr. Solmes as my friend, you treat him the worse---That's the plain dunstable of the matter, Miss!

    October 11, 2007

  • These lines of Rowe have got into my head; and I shall repeat them very devoutly all the way the chairmen shall poppet me towards her by-and-by.

    October 11, 2007

  • That's a possibility; the word was originally a mispronunciation of intoxication.

    October 11, 2007

  • I once thought a little qualifying among such violent spirits was not amiss.

    October 11, 2007

  • to scowl, sulk, frown, glower

    October 9, 2007

  • Your papa will be obeyed. He is willing to hope you to be all obedience, and would prevent all incitements to refractoriness.

    October 9, 2007

  • I arose, the man hemming up for a speech, rising and beginning to set his splay feet...

    October 9, 2007

  • But, unluckily, there was the odious Solmes sitting asquat between my mamma and sister...

    October 9, 2007

  • A week; seven nights (see also fortnight)

    October 9, 2007

  • Wounds, i.e. God's wounds (see also Zounds):

    Sheridan, The School for Scandal:

    "Oons, haven’t you got enough of them?"

    October 9, 2007

  • After all, methinks I want those tostications (thou seest how women, and women's words, fill my mind) to be over, happily over, that I may sit down quietly, and reflect upon the dangers I have passed through, and the troubles I have undergone.

    October 4, 2007

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Comments for minerva

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  • Where have you been, Minerva? We miss your wonderful citations.

    June 26, 2008

  • The Goddess of poetry and wisdom is a great fit for Wordie.

    October 9, 2007

  • Minerva, thank you for that tostications quote, absolutely fantastic.

    October 4, 2007