The Spectator, Volume 11793 |
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Pagina v
Joseph Addison. was reprefented as an enemy to the church , he would never do it any injury but by withholding Addison from it . In 1695 he wrote a poem to king William and in 1697 another on the peace of Ryfwick . Having yet no public ...
Joseph Addison. was reprefented as an enemy to the church , he would never do it any injury but by withholding Addison from it . In 1695 he wrote a poem to king William and in 1697 another on the peace of Ryfwick . Having yet no public ...
Pagina vi
... never to remit his regular fees in civility to his friends : " For ( faid he ) I may s have a hundred friends ; and if my fee be two " guineas , I fhall by relinguifhing my right " lofe two hundred guineas , and no friend gain " more ...
... never to remit his regular fees in civility to his friends : " For ( faid he ) I may s have a hundred friends ; and if my fee be two " guineas , I fhall by relinguifhing my right " lofe two hundred guineas , and no friend gain " more ...
Pagina viii
... never wholly lofe , while they continue to be among the firft books by which both fexes are initiated in the elegancies of knowledge . The Tatler and Spectator reduced the unfet- tled practice of daily intercourfe to propriety and ...
... never wholly lofe , while they continue to be among the firft books by which both fexes are initiated in the elegancies of knowledge . The Tatler and Spectator reduced the unfet- tled practice of daily intercourfe to propriety and ...
Pagina xviii
... never contradicted by his enemies . Of those with whom intereft or opinion united him , he had not only the esteem but the kindnefs ; and of others , whom the violence of oppofition drove against him , though he might lofe the love , he ...
... never contradicted by his enemies . Of those with whom intereft or opinion united him , he had not only the esteem but the kindnefs ; and of others , whom the violence of oppofition drove against him , though he might lofe the love , he ...
Pagina xix
... never have feen his defects , but by the lights which he afford- ed them . But before the profound obfervers of the prefent race repofe too fecurely on their fupe- riority to Addison , let them confider his remarks on Ovid , in which ...
... never have feen his defects , but by the lights which he afford- ed them . But before the profound obfervers of the prefent race repofe too fecurely on their fupe- riority to Addison , let them confider his remarks on Ovid , in which ...
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admiration affembly againſt audience beauty becauſe behaviour bufinefs club confider converfation correfpondents defcribed defign defire difcourfe diverfion drefs endeavour English eyes faid falfe fame fatire fcene fecret feems feen fenfe feveral fhall fhew fhort fhould fide filks fince firft firſt flain fociety fome fomething fometimes foon fpeak fpeculations fpeech ftage fubject fuch fuffer fure gentleman give greateſt herſelf himſelf honour houfe humble fervant humour inftead itſelf juft kind king lady laft laſt lefs likewife lion look mind moft moſt mufic muft muſt myfelf nature never obferved occafion opera ourſelves OVID paffion pafs paper perfon Pict pleafed pleaſe pleaſure poet prefent raiſed reader reafon reprefent ſhall ſhe ſpeak Spectator ſtage thefe themfelves theſe thing thofe thoſe thought tragedy underſtanding uſed verfe whofe whole woman words worfe writing