The Spectator, Volume 2S. Marks, 1826 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 100
Pagina 6
... nature . Death , and some of the imaginary persons in his chaos . These passages are astonishing , but not credible ; the reader cannot so far impose upon himself as to see a possibility in them ; theyare the description of dreams and ...
... nature . Death , and some of the imaginary persons in his chaos . These passages are astonishing , but not credible ; the reader cannot so far impose upon himself as to see a possibility in them ; theyare the description of dreams and ...
Pagina 8
... nature of the part they are engaged in , and age has produced thought far otherwise ; for what figure it will make in the minds of those who can think either Socrates or Demosthenes they leave behind them , whether it was worth lost any ...
... nature of the part they are engaged in , and age has produced thought far otherwise ; for what figure it will make in the minds of those who can think either Socrates or Demosthenes they leave behind them , whether it was worth lost any ...
Pagina 23
... nature's desire , In whose sight all things joy , with ravishment , Attracted by thy beauty still to gaze ! ' An injudicious poet would have made Adam discomposure in her looks . The posture in talk through the whole work in such ...
... nature's desire , In whose sight all things joy , with ravishment , Attracted by thy beauty still to gaze ! ' An injudicious poet would have made Adam discomposure in her looks . The posture in talk through the whole work in such ...
Pagina 35
... natural to some men ; but even these would together uncultivated , and is unhappily fallen be highly more graceful in their carriage , if under the imputation of illiterate and mechanic . what they do from the force of nature were con ...
... natural to some men ; but even these would together uncultivated , and is unhappily fallen be highly more graceful in their carriage , if under the imputation of illiterate and mechanic . what they do from the force of nature were con ...
Pagina 40
... nature suggested , and from the other , such as flowed from the exactest art , and judgment : though I must confess that my cu- riosity led me so much to observe the knights , reflections , that I was not well at leisure to improve ...
... nature suggested , and from the other , such as flowed from the exactest art , and judgment : though I must confess that my cu- riosity led me so much to observe the knights , reflections , that I was not well at leisure to improve ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquaintance admired Æneid agreeable appear beauty behold body called cern character Cicero consider conversation creature dæmon death delight desire discourse divine endeavour entertainment eyes fancy favour fortune gentleman give hand happy hath hear heart heaven Homer honour hope human humble servant humour husband Iliad imagination Julius Cæsar Jupiter kind lady learning letter live look lover mankind manner marriage married matter ment mind Mohocks nature neral ness never obliged observed occasion Ovid pain paper Paradise Lost particular pass passion person pleased pleasure Plutarch poem poet present racter reader reason received Rechteren Roscommon sense sight sion soul speak SPECTATOR spirit tell thee thing thor thou thought tion told town tural Virg Virgil virtue whig whole woman words writing yard land young