The Spectator, Volume 1Dent, 1958 |
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Pagina 289
... Virtue that may find Employment for those Retired Hours in which we are altogether left to our selves , and destitute of Company and Conversation ; I mean , that Intercourse and Communication which every reasonable Creature ought to ...
... Virtue that may find Employment for those Retired Hours in which we are altogether left to our selves , and destitute of Company and Conversation ; I mean , that Intercourse and Communication which every reasonable Creature ought to ...
Pagina 319
... Virtue and Decency are so nearly related , that it is difficult to separate them from each other but in our Imagination . As the Beauty of the Body always accompanies the Health of it , so certainly is Decency concomitant to Virtue : As ...
... Virtue and Decency are so nearly related , that it is difficult to separate them from each other but in our Imagination . As the Beauty of the Body always accompanies the Health of it , so certainly is Decency concomitant to Virtue : As ...
Pagina 339
... Virtue , and come up to the Perfection of his Nature , before he is hurried off the Stage . Would an infinitely wise ... Virtue to Virtue , and Knowledge to Knowledge ; carries in it something wonderfully agreeable to that Ambition which ...
... Virtue , and come up to the Perfection of his Nature , before he is hurried off the Stage . Would an infinitely wise ... Virtue to Virtue , and Knowledge to Knowledge ; carries in it something wonderfully agreeable to that Ambition which ...
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A. D. Lindsay Acquaintance ADDISON Admiration Aeneid agreeable appear Audience Author Beauty Behaviour Body Character Cicero Club Coffee-house Company Conversation Country Creature Discourse Dress Dryden Dunciad edition endeavour English Entertainment Epigrams Ernest Rhys Essays Eyes Favour Fortune Friend G. D. H. Cole Genius Gentleman George Saintsbury Georgics give Heart Honour Horace Hudibras humble Servant Humour Introduction by Prof Juvenal kind King Lady Learning Letter live look Love Lover Mankind manner Master Mind Motto Musick Nature never Night Nikolay Andreyev Number observed Occasion Opera ordinary Ovid Paper particular Passion Person Pharamond Pict Place Play pleased Pleasure Poem Poets present publick Reader Reason Satires Satyr Sense shew Sir ROGER speak SPECTATOR STEELE Tatler tell Theodosius thing thou thought tion told Town Tragedy Translated Verse Virgil Virtue Whig whole Woman Women Words World Writings young