The Spectator, Volume 1George Atherton Aitken Routledge, 1975 |
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Pagina 79
... English verse answer to those of the Italian , that both of them might go to the same tune . Thus the famous song in Camilla 3 Barbara si t ' intendo , & c . ( Barbarous woman , yes , I know your meaning ) which expresses the ...
... English verse answer to those of the Italian , that both of them might go to the same tune . Thus the famous song in Camilla 3 Barbara si t ' intendo , & c . ( Barbarous woman , yes , I know your meaning ) which expresses the ...
Pagina 81
... English , the English have a genius for other per- formances of a much higher nature , and capable of giving the mind a much nobler entertainment . Would one think it was possible ( at a time when an author lived that was able to write ...
... English , the English have a genius for other per- formances of a much higher nature , and capable of giving the mind a much nobler entertainment . Would one think it was possible ( at a time when an author lived that was able to write ...
Pagina 122
... English gentleman , when he hears a French tragedy , to complain that the actors all of them speak in a tone , and therefore he very wisely prefers his own countrymen , not considering that a foreigner complains of the same tone in an ...
... English gentleman , when he hears a French tragedy , to complain that the actors all of them speak in a tone , and therefore he very wisely prefers his own countrymen , not considering that a foreigner complains of the same tone in an ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquaint acrostics Addison admiration agreeable ancient appear audience Aurengzebe beauty behaviour Bouts-Rimés called character Chevy Chase club Coffee-House conversation Covent Garden discourse dress E. K. CHAMBERS endeavour English entertainment eyes face false favour folio G. A. AITKEN genius gentleman give hand heart honour Hudibras humble Servant humour Isaac Bickerstaff Italian kind King Kit-Cat Club lady laugh learned letter lion live look Lord lover mankind manner mind nation nature never night observed occasion opera OVID paper particular passion person Pharamond Pict play pleased pleasure poem poet present prince reader reason Richard Steele says scenes sense Sir Roger speak Spectator stage Steele Steele's Tatler tell things thought tion told town tragedy turn verses VIRG virtue Whig whole woman women words writings young