The Spectator, Volume 1Alexander Chalmers D. Appleton., 1879 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 74
Pagina 5
... sense of interest and propriety , that he disregarded Addison's services when chiefly he experienced the benefit arising from them , and discontinued the Tatler that he might begin another work without his aid . * " I will not meddle ...
... sense of interest and propriety , that he disregarded Addison's services when chiefly he experienced the benefit arising from them , and discontinued the Tatler that he might begin another work without his aid . * " I will not meddle ...
Pagina 12
... sense , " not , I allow , a very common source of singularities , in the usual accep- tation of that word ; and before he was " crossed in love by the perverse widow , he was a gay man of the town . " And with respect to the care Addi ...
... sense , " not , I allow , a very common source of singularities , in the usual accep- tation of that word ; and before he was " crossed in love by the perverse widow , he was a gay man of the town . " And with respect to the care Addi ...
Pagina 16
... sense , but abounding in ab- surdities . " Capt Sentry is said to have been C. Kempenfelt , father of Admiral Kempenfelt who de- plorably lost his life when the Royal George , of 100 guns , sunk at Spithead , Aug. 29 , 1782 ; and Will ...
... sense , but abounding in ab- surdities . " Capt Sentry is said to have been C. Kempenfelt , father of Admiral Kempenfelt who de- plorably lost his life when the Royal George , of 100 guns , sunk at Spithead , Aug. 29 , 1782 ; and Will ...
Pagina 41
... sense of the services he had rendered to the public may have no doubt aggravated the insult which he received from the ministry , and which certainly cannot be palli- ated . His first appearance as an author is said by Cib- ber ( or ...
... sense of the services he had rendered to the public may have no doubt aggravated the insult which he received from the ministry , and which certainly cannot be palli- ated . His first appearance as an author is said by Cib- ber ( or ...
Pagina 54
... sense enough to censure a prevailing folly with some degree of hu- mour , and with great justice . The same subject has been since illustrated in the World by another nobleman , Philip Earl of Chesterfield . The Earl of Hardwicke , who ...
... sense enough to censure a prevailing folly with some degree of hu- mour , and with great justice . The same subject has been since illustrated in the World by another nobleman , Philip Earl of Chesterfield . The Earl of Hardwicke , who ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
50 cents 75 cents acquaintance acrostics Addison admiration Æneid Æsop agreeable appear APPLETON audience beauty behaviour Benjamin Disraeli called character Chelsea CHRISTIAN REID cloth club coffee-house discourse dress DRYDEN edition endeavour English entertainment Eustace Budgell eyes face favour final note folio Forming Number genius gentleman George Etheridge give heart honour humble servant humour kind king lady laugh letter lion live look lord lover mankind manner merit mind morocco nature never novel observed occasion opera OVID Paper cover passion Paul Heyse person Pharamond Pict play pleased poem poet PURDUE LIBRARIES reader reason Rhoda Broughton Roger de Coverley ROSCOMMON says seems sense signatures Sir Roger speak Spect Spectator Steele Tatler thing thought tion told tragedy verses VIRG virtue whig whole woman women words writing young