The Spectator, Volume 2Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele J. Tonson, 1724 |
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Pagina 15
... Readers , who are better Judges of the Language than of the Sentiments , and confequently relish the one more than the ... Reader , after the Perufal of a Scene , would confider the naked Thought of every Speech in it , when divefted of ...
... Readers , who are better Judges of the Language than of the Sentiments , and confequently relish the one more than the ... Reader , after the Perufal of a Scene , would confider the naked Thought of every Speech in it , when divefted of ...
Pagina 25
... Reader , when he fees the Tragedy of Oedipus , to obferve how quietly the Hero is difmiffed at the End of the third Act , after having pro- nounced the following Lines , in which the Thought is very natural , and apt to move Compaffion ...
... Reader , when he fees the Tragedy of Oedipus , to obferve how quietly the Hero is difmiffed at the End of the third Act , after having pro- nounced the following Lines , in which the Thought is very natural , and apt to move Compaffion ...
Pagina 38
... Reader's Imagination to mul- tiply Twenty Men into fuch prodigious Multitudes , or to fancy that two " three hundred thousand Soldiers are . fighting in a Room of forty or fifty Yards in Compass . Incidents of fuch nature should be told ...
... Reader's Imagination to mul- tiply Twenty Men into fuch prodigious Multitudes , or to fancy that two " three hundred thousand Soldiers are . fighting in a Room of forty or fifty Yards in Compass . Incidents of fuch nature should be told ...
Pagina 39
... Reader a more lively Idea of an Army or a Bat- tel in a Description , than if he actually faw them drawn up in Squadrons and Battalions , or engaged in the Confufion of of a Fight . Our Minds fhould be o- pened N ° 42 The SPECTATOR . 39.
... Reader a more lively Idea of an Army or a Bat- tel in a Description , than if he actually faw them drawn up in Squadrons and Battalions , or engaged in the Confufion of of a Fight . Our Minds fhould be o- pened N ° 42 The SPECTATOR . 39.
Pagina 49
... Reader is wonderfully pre- pared for his Reception by the Difcour fes that precede it : His dumb Behavi- our , at his firft Entrance , strikes the I- magination very ftrongly : but every Time he enters , he is ftill more terrify- ing ...
... Reader is wonderfully pre- pared for his Reception by the Difcour fes that precede it : His dumb Behavi- our , at his firft Entrance , strikes the I- magination very ftrongly : but every Time he enters , he is ftill more terrify- ing ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Acrofticks Admiration Affembly againſt Anagrams April 26 Audience Author Avarice beautiful becauſe beft cife Club Coffee-houſe confifts Converfation Country defcribed defigned defire Difcourfe dreffed Earl Douglas endeavour English Epigram Expreffions Eyes faid falfe Wit fame Faſhion fays feems feen felf felves feve feveral fhall fhew fhort fhould fince firft firſt flain fome fomething fometimes foon fpeak Friend ftood fuch fure give greateſt Heart Hero himſelf ibid juft kind of Wit King Lady laft laſt laugh leaft likewife look Love Lover meaſure Mind Miſtreſs moft moſt muft muſt Nature Numbers obferve Occafion Ovid Paffion Perfon Philofophers Play pleafed pleaſed Pleaſure Poem Poet Pofie prefent Prince publick Punn raiſed Reader Reafon Refemblance reprefent Rhymes ſee Senfe ſeveral ſhe SPECTA SPECTATOR thefe themſelves ther theſe thing thofe thoſe thou Thought Tragedy underſtand uſe Verfe whofe whole Words Writing