Also in 1769, Frances Brooke's novel The History of Emily Montague was used in the earliest Oxford English Dictionary citation for the hyperbolic or figurative sense of "literally"; the sentence from the novel used was, "He is a fortunate man to be introduced to such a party of fine women at his arrival; it is literally to feed among the lilies. A History of Emily Montague would have been a far better read had it been about 350 pages shorter. The book can be (roughly) summed up as follows: a handful of sentimental 20-somethings are living in 18th-century Quebec, and, for fun, they send each other epistles in which they hyperbolically expound upon their personal love lives. That being said, I enjoyed the first 100 pages or so: there HISTORY OF EMILY MONTAGUE. LETTER I. [1] Melmoth is a very pleasing, genteel brunette, but Emily Montague–you will say I am in love with her if I describe her, and yet I declare to you I am not: knowing she loves another, to whom she is soon to be united, I see her charms with the same kind of pleasure I do yours; a pleasure, which, tho
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