id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 18906 L'Estrange, A. G. K. (Alfred Guy Kingan) History of English Humour, Vol. 2 .txt text/plain 91431 4932 75 Swift says that Stella "always said the best thing in the company," but humour and ridicule in the possession of an ill-natured man.... man of so much good humour; but to this day he is seldom merry, but "One of the wits of the last age, who was a man of a good estate, jest, and came into it with so much good humour that they lived in think I see you looking twenty times a day at the house--almost Frere was a man of great taste and humour. than as a man of society, and passed for what was called a "wit." The says that English humour "far from agreeable, and bitter in taste, like people would little feel the humour at which they could not laugh, and generally under the form of saying that a thing is _like_ in speaking of a good-humoured man. ./cache/18906.txt ./txt/18906.txt