Selections from the SpectatorKenneth Deighton Macmillan, 1966 - 220 pagina's |
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Pagina 82
... live above his present circum . stances , is in great danger of living in a little time much beneath then , or , as the Italian proverb runs , the man who lives by hope will die by hunger . 30 It should be an indispensable rule in life ...
... live above his present circum . stances , is in great danger of living in a little time much beneath then , or , as the Italian proverb runs , the man who lives by hope will die by hunger . 30 It should be an indispensable rule in life ...
Pagina 120
... live- liness and assurance are in a peculiar manner the qualifications of the French nation , the same habits and customs will not give the same offence to that people , which they produce among those of our own country . Modesty is our ...
... live- liness and assurance are in a peculiar manner the qualifications of the French nation , the same habits and customs will not give the same offence to that people , which they produce among those of our own country . Modesty is our ...
Pagina 188
... live up ... possessions , regulate our expenditure not by what we actually possess , but by what we expect some day to become possessed of ; spend up to the limits of our expectations , not those of our income . make a figure , indulge ...
... live up ... possessions , regulate our expenditure not by what we actually possess , but by what we expect some day to become possessed of ; spend up to the limits of our expectations , not those of our income . make a figure , indulge ...
Inhoudsopgave
SELECTIONS FROM THE SPECTATOR I The Spectators Account of Himself | 1 |
Of the Club | 5 |
Public Credit a Vision | 11 |
Copyright | |
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