The Spectator, Volume 3George Gregory Smith Dent, 1967 |
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Pagina 173
... present Hour by delaying from Day to Day to execute what we ought to do immediately ; so most of us take Occasion to sit still and throw away the Time in our Possession , by Retrospect on what is past , imagining we have already ...
... present Hour by delaying from Day to Day to execute what we ought to do immediately ; so most of us take Occasion to sit still and throw away the Time in our Possession , by Retrospect on what is past , imagining we have already ...
Pagina 227
... present Season of the Year , by the recommending of a Practice for which every one has sufficient Abilities . I would have my Readers endeavour to moralize this natural Pleasure of the Soul , and to improve this vernal Delight , as ...
... present Season of the Year , by the recommending of a Practice for which every one has sufficient Abilities . I would have my Readers endeavour to moralize this natural Pleasure of the Soul , and to improve this vernal Delight , as ...
Pagina 454
... present seldom affords sufficient Employment to the Mind of Man . Objects of Pain or Pleasure , Love or Admira- tion ... present to entertain us . It is like those Repositories in several Animals , that are filled with Stores of their ...
... present seldom affords sufficient Employment to the Mind of Man . Objects of Pain or Pleasure , Love or Admira- tion ... present to entertain us . It is like those Repositories in several Animals , that are filled with Stores of their ...
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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