The Spectator, Volume 1Alexander Chalmers E. Sargeant, M. & W. Ward, Munroe, Francis & Parker, and Edward Cotton, Boston, 1810 |
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Pagina 6
... Readers , represented by the Club ......... .. 35. False Wit and Humour - Genealogy of Humour --- 36. Letters from the Play - house , on the Dismission of inanimate Performers .... STEELE 37. Catalogue of a Lady's Library - Character of ...
... Readers , represented by the Club ......... .. 35. False Wit and Humour - Genealogy of Humour --- 36. Letters from the Play - house , on the Dismission of inanimate Performers .... STEELE 37. Catalogue of a Lady's Library - Character of ...
Pagina 15
... reader finds himself intimately ac- quainted with it . Considering what is done , one cannot doubt the author's ability to have support- ed the character through a much greater variety of conversations and adventures . But the SPEC ...
... reader finds himself intimately ac- quainted with it . Considering what is done , one cannot doubt the author's ability to have support- ed the character through a much greater variety of conversations and adventures . But the SPEC ...
Pagina 19
... reader will refer to Sir AN- DREW's letter , in No. 549 , in which he announces his plan of retirement , he will find in it nothing This opinion is given in a different manner in BoSWELL'S Life of JOHNSON . " ADDISON has made his Sir ...
... reader will refer to Sir AN- DREW's letter , in No. 549 , in which he announces his plan of retirement , he will find in it nothing This opinion is given in a different manner in BoSWELL'S Life of JOHNSON . " ADDISON has made his Sir ...
Pagina 24
... reader his real interest , the care of pleasing the Author of his being . " Many of the subjects discussed in these vo- lumes may now appear trite , because frequent repetition and successive illustration have ren- dered them familiar ...
... reader his real interest , the care of pleasing the Author of his being . " Many of the subjects discussed in these vo- lumes may now appear trite , because frequent repetition and successive illustration have ren- dered them familiar ...
Pagina 25
... readers was not great , and the books calculated by allurement to increase that number were very few . The de- mand ... reader . Above all , the niceties of litera- ture were not generally understood , and it is not the smallest merit ...
... readers was not great , and the books calculated by allurement to increase that number were very few . The de- mand ... reader . Above all , the niceties of litera- ture were not generally understood , and it is not the smallest merit ...
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Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquaint acrostic ADDISON admiration agreeable anagram appear Aristotle audience beauty behaviour BUDGELL called character club coffee-house conversation discourse dress edition endeavour English entertainment envious Ephesian Matron EUSTACE BUDGELL eyes Falstaff favour frequently genius gentleman give hearing sense heart hero honour Hudibras humble servant humour Italian kind king lady language laugh learned letter lion live look LORD lover mankind manner March 12 MARCH 21 means ment merit mind nature never night observed occasion opera paper passion person Pict piece play poem poet present racter reader reason rhymes ridicule ROGER DE COVERLEY ROSCOMMON says scenes sense shew sion Sir ROGER speak SPECTATOR stage STEELE talk taste TATLER thing THOMAS PARNELL thors thought tion told tragedy verse virtue whig whole woman word writing young