The Spectator, Volume 2Dent, 1945 - 524 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 55
Pagina 101
... Favour or Esteem in the Opinion and common Sense of their Fellow Creatures . The Folly of People's procedure , in imagining that nothing more is necessary than Property and superior Circumstances to support them in Distinction , appears ...
... Favour or Esteem in the Opinion and common Sense of their Fellow Creatures . The Folly of People's procedure , in imagining that nothing more is necessary than Property and superior Circumstances to support them in Distinction , appears ...
Pagina 116
... Favour that could be bestowed upon him . Socrates then asks him , If after having received this great Favour he would be contented to lose his Life , or if he would receive it tho ' he was sure he should make an ill use of it ? To both ...
... Favour that could be bestowed upon him . Socrates then asks him , If after having received this great Favour he would be contented to lose his Life , or if he would receive it tho ' he was sure he should make an ill use of it ? To both ...
Pagina 446
Joseph Addison George Gregory Smith. out of Favour with her Father . I hope you will pardon the Trouble I give ; but shall take it for a mighty Favour , if you will give me a little more of your Advice to put me in a write Way to cheat ...
Joseph Addison George Gregory Smith. out of Favour with her Father . I hope you will pardon the Trouble I give ; but shall take it for a mighty Favour , if you will give me a little more of your Advice to put me in a write Way to cheat ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquainted Actions ADDISON Admiration Aeneid agreeable Alcibiades appear Aristotle Author Beauty Behaviour Boileau Character Charles Dieupart Cicero Circumstances consider Conversation Creature Criticks Desire Discourse endeavoured Entertainment Enville Epic Poetry Fable Fame Father Favour Female Fortune Friend Gentleman give greatest Happiness Head Heart Homer Honour hope Horace Hudibras humane humble Servant Humour Husband Iliad Imagination Innocence Juvenal kind Lady Letter live look Love Lover Mankind Manner Mariamne Marriage Matter mean Milton Mind Mistress Motto Nature never Number obliged observe Occasion Opinion Ovid Paper Paradise Lost particular pass Passion Person Place pleased Pleasure Plutarch Poem Poet pray present pretend proper publick Reader Reason Renegado Sappho Satyr Sense Sentiments shew Socrates Soul speak SPECTATOR Speculation Spirit STEELE Subject Tatler tell Temper thing Thoughts tion told Town turn Virgil Virtue whole Wife Woman Women Words World write young