The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison: The Spectator, no. 162-483G. Bell and sons, 1912 |
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Страница 4
... endeavour to live up to your rules , which I hope will incline you to pity my con- dition ; I shall open it to you in a very few words . About three years since a gentleman , whom , I am sure , you your- self would have approved , made ...
... endeavour to live up to your rules , which I hope will incline you to pity my con- dition ; I shall open it to you in a very few words . About three years since a gentleman , whom , I am sure , you your- self would have approved , made ...
Страница 23
... endeavour to soothe and assuage their secret resentments . Besides , jealousy puts a woman often in mind of an ill thing that she would not otherwise perhaps have thought of , and fills her imagination with such an unlucky idea , as in ...
... endeavour to soothe and assuage their secret resentments . Besides , jealousy puts a woman often in mind of an ill thing that she would not otherwise perhaps have thought of , and fills her imagination with such an unlucky idea , as in ...
Страница 38
... endeavour.to find out entertainments for both kinds , and by that means perhaps consult the good of both , more than I should do did I always write to the particular taste of either . As they neither of them know what I proceed upon ...
... endeavour.to find out entertainments for both kinds , and by that means perhaps consult the good of both , more than I should do did I always write to the particular taste of either . As they neither of them know what I proceed upon ...
Страница 39
... endeavour to make themselves diverting without being immoral . One may ap- ply to these authors that passage in Waller , Poets lose half the praise they would have got , Were it but known what they discreetly blot . As nothing is more ...
... endeavour to make themselves diverting without being immoral . One may ap- ply to these authors that passage in Waller , Poets lose half the praise they would have got , Were it but known what they discreetly blot . As nothing is more ...
Страница 87
... fancy to such a toy . " The ninth species of females were taken out of the ape . These are such as are both ugly and ill - natured , who have nothing beautiful in themselves , and endeavour to detract from No. 209 . 87 THE SPECTATOR .
... fancy to such a toy . " The ninth species of females were taken out of the ape . These are such as are both ugly and ill - natured , who have nothing beautiful in themselves , and endeavour to detract from No. 209 . 87 THE SPECTATOR .
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Често срещани думи и фрази
action Adam Adam and Eve admirable Æneid agreeable Alcibiades ancient angels appear Aristotle beautiful called character colours consider conversation critics death delight described discourse discover Divine earth Edited endeavoured English entertainment Enville everything fable fallen angels fancy father filled give happiness head heart heaven Homer honour humour ideas Iliad imagination Jupiter kind letter likewise live look mankind manner Mariamne marriage means Milton mind moral nature neral never noble observed occasion opinion Ovid paper Paradise Lost particular passage passion perfection person pleased pleasure poem poet poetry proper raised reader reason received religion renegado Sappho Satan says secret sentiments short Sir Roger Socrates soul species speech spirit sublime take notice tells temper thee Theodosius things thou thought tion told Translated turn verse VIRG Virgil virtue vols whole words writing