Coach
in sentence
565 examples of Coach in a sentence
Well, the time was appointed, we had a rich coach, very good horses, a coachman, postillion, and two footmen in very good liveries; a gentleman on horseback, and a page with a feather in his hat upon another horse.
But while this was in debate he fell very sick; he had gone out to a place in Somersetshire, called Shepton, where he had some business and was there taken very ill, and so ill that he could not travel; so he sent his man back to Bath, to beg me that I would hire a
coach
and come over to him.
It was a great while after this that I had occasion, on my own business, to go to Bristol, upon which he hired me a coach, and would go with me, and did so; and now indeed our intimacy increased.
I liked this offer very well, and accordingly hired a
coach
on purpose, and taking my child, and a wet-nurse to tend and suckle it, and a maid-servant with me, away I went for London.
He met me at Reading in his own chariot, and taking me into that, left the servant and the child in the hired coach, and so he brought me to my new lodgings at Hammersmith; with which I had abundance of reason to be very well pleased, for they were very handsome rooms, and I was very well accommodated.
All the way we went she caressed me with the utmost appearance of a sincere, undissembled affection; treated me, except my coach-hire, all the way; and her brother brought a gentleman's
coach
to Warrington to receive us, and we were carried from thence to Liverpool with as much ceremony as I could desire.
She did so; her uncle, as she called him, sent a
coach
and four horses for us, and we were carried near forty miles I know not whither.
However, he did not hurry me, for we stayed near three weeks longer, and then he sent to Chester for a
coach
to meet us at the Black Rock, as they call it, over against Liverpool.
He said, not at all, any longer than one night or two, but he would immediately hire a
coach
to go to Holyhead.
Once I resolved to take the stage-coach to West Chester, on purpose only to have the satisfaction of coming back, that he might see me really come in the same coach; for I had a jealous thought, though I had no ground for it at all, lest he should think I was not really in the country.
Having taken my measure for this journey I let her know it, and sent the maid that tended me, from the beginning, to take a place for me in the
coach.
I took the place in the
coach
not to its full extent, but to a place called Stone, in Cheshire, I think it is, where I not only had no manner of business, but not so much as the least acquaintance with any person in the town or near it.
It happened to be a chance
coach
that I had taken up, which, having been hired on purpose to carry some gentlemen to West Chester who were going for Ireland, was now returning, and did not tie itself to exact times or places as the stages did; so that, having been obliged to lie still on Sunday, he had time to get himself ready to come out, which otherwise he could not have done.
He pleased me doubly too by the figure he came in, for he brought a very handsome (gentleman's)
coach
and four horses, with a servant to attend him.
He took me out of the stage-coach immediately, which stopped at an inn in Brickhill; and putting into the same inn, he set up his own coach, and bespoke his dinner.
He had been told, it seems, that we had met there by accident, that I came in the Chester coach, and my gentleman in his own
coach
to meet me; that we were to have met last night at Stony-Stratford, but that he could not reach so far.
We came away the fifth day; and my landlord, because he saw me uneasy, mounted himself, his son, and three honest country fellows with good firearms, and, without telling us of it, followed the coach, and would see us safe into Dunstable.
Here I told her a formal story, that I expected my husband every day from Ireland, and that I had sent a letter to him that I would meet him at Dunstable at her house, and that he would certainly land, if the wind was fair, in a few days, so that I was come to spend a few days with them till he should come, for he was either come post, or in the West Chester coach, I knew not which; but whichsoever it was, he would be sure to come to that house to meet me.
At last he told me that, without compliment, he was charmed with my company, and asked me if I durst trust myself in a
coach
with him; he told me he was a man of honour, and would not offer anything to me unbecoming him as such.
He carried me in the
coach
to the Spring Garden, at Knightsbridge, where we walked in the gardens, and he treated me very handsomely; but I found he drank very freely.
We came away in the
coach
again, and he brought me into the streets, and by this time it was near ten o'clock at night, and he stopped the
coach
at a house where, it seems, he was acquainted, and where they made no scruple to show us upstairs into a room with a bed in it.
All this while he drank freely too, and about one in the morning we went into the
coach
again.
The air and the shaking of the
coach
made the drink he had get more up in his head than it was before, and he grew uneasy in the coach, and was for acting over again what he had been doing before; but as I thought my game now secure, I resisted him, and brought him to be a little still, which had not lasted five minutes but he fell fast asleep.
I took a gold watch, with a silk purse of gold, his fine full-bottom periwig and silver-fringed gloves, his sword and fine snuff-box, and gently opening the
coach
door, stood ready to jump out while the
coach
was going on; but the
coach
stopped in the narrow street beyond Temple Bar to let another
coach
pass, I got softly out, fastened the door again, and gave my gentleman and the
coach
the slip both together, and never heard more of them.
'What adventure?' said he.'Why,' said she, 'of your being robbed coming from Knightbr----; Hampstead, sir, I should say,' says she.'Be not surprised, sir,' says she, 'that I am able to tell you every step you took that day from the cloister in Smithfield to the Spring Garden at Knightsbridge, and thence to the ---- in the Strand, and how you were left asleep in the
coach
afterwards.
I said no more to her, or she to me, a good while; but by and by, somebody calling her at a door a little way off, she desired me that if anybody called for the Barnet coach, I would step and call her at the house, which it seems was an alehouse.
She was no sooner gone but comes a wench and a child, puffing and sweating, and asks for the Barnet
coach.
I answered presently, 'Here.''Do you belong to the Barnet coach?' says she.'Yes, sweetheart,' said I; 'what do ye want?''I want room for two passengers,' says she.'Where are they, sweetheart?' said I.'Here's this girl, pray let her go into the coach,' says she, 'and I'll go and fetch my mistress.'
The maid had a great bundle under her arm; so she put the child into the coach, and I said, 'You had best put your bundle into the
coach
too.''No,' says she, 'I am afraid somebody should slip it away from the child.''Give to me, then,' said I, 'and I'll take care of it.'
Then when they saw him they cried out, 'That's he, that's he'; and every now and then came a good dab of dirt at him; and thus we marched a good while, till the mercer thought fit to desire the constable to call a
coach
to protect himself from the rabble; so we rode the rest of the way, the constable and I, and the mercer and his man.
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