The Spectator, Volume 3George Gregory Smith Dent, 1967 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 48
Pagina 38
... Beauty in his singling out by Name these three remarkable Mountains , so well known to the Greeks . This last is such a Beauty as the Scene of Milton's War could not possibly furnish him with . Claudian , in his Fragment upon the Gyants ...
... Beauty in his singling out by Name these three remarkable Mountains , so well known to the Greeks . This last is such a Beauty as the Scene of Milton's War could not possibly furnish him with . Claudian , in his Fragment upon the Gyants ...
Pagina 260
... Beauty of the Words , by following that Noble Example , which has been set him by the greatest Foreign Masters in that Art . I could heartily wish there was the same Applications and Endeavours to cultivate and improve our Church ...
... Beauty of the Words , by following that Noble Example , which has been set him by the greatest Foreign Masters in that Art . I could heartily wish there was the same Applications and Endeavours to cultivate and improve our Church ...
Pagina 279
... Beauty ; but still there will be such a Mixture of Delight in the very Disgust it gives us , as any of these three Qualifications are most conspicuous and prevailing . By Greatness , I do not only mean the Bulk of any single Object ...
... Beauty ; but still there will be such a Mixture of Delight in the very Disgust it gives us , as any of these three Qualifications are most conspicuous and prevailing . By Greatness , I do not only mean the Bulk of any single Object ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Acquaintance ADDISON Admiration Aeneas Aeneid agreeable appear Author Bagnio Beauty Behaviour behold Callisthenes Character Chearfulness Cicero Circumstances Company consider Conversation Country Creature Delight desire Discourse Eastcourt Eclogues endeavour Entertainment Eyes Fancy Father Favour Fortune Friend Gentleman Georgics give Hand happy Heart Heaven Homer Honour hope Horace humble Servant Humour Iliad Imagination Jupiter Juvenal kind Lady Learning Letter live look Looking-Glass Love Mankind Manner Margaret Clark Matter Milton Mind Modesty Mohocks Morality Motto Nature never Night Number obliged observed Occasion Ovid Paper Paradise Paradise Lost particular Passage Passion Paul Lorrain Persius Person Place pleased Pleasure Plutarch Poem Poet present Publick Reader Reason received Satyr shew Sight Sir Richard Baker Sir ROGER Soul SPECTATOR Spirit STEELE Subject surprized Tatler tell thee thing thou thought tion told Town Virgil Virtue whole Woman Words World Writing young