The Spectator, Volume 1Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele, Donald Frederic Bond Clarendon Press, 1965 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 49
Pagina xxxvi
... represented his Sir Roger , and Shakespeare his Falstaff.1 The satire is there , and all the more effective for being unobtrusive . Whatever Sir Roger may have meant to later generations there can be little doubt of Addison's intention ...
... represented his Sir Roger , and Shakespeare his Falstaff.1 The satire is there , and all the more effective for being unobtrusive . Whatever Sir Roger may have meant to later generations there can be little doubt of Addison's intention ...
Pagina 95
... represented to have , is that of Lust . As for my self , who have long taken Pains in personat- ing the Passions , I have to Night acted only an Appetite : The Part I play'd is Thirst , but it is represented as written rather by a Dray ...
... represented to have , is that of Lust . As for my self , who have long taken Pains in personat- ing the Passions , I have to Night acted only an Appetite : The Part I play'd is Thirst , but it is represented as written rather by a Dray ...
Pagina 424
... represented under their proper Characters . Some eminent Historian may then probably arise that will not write recentibus odiis , ( as Tacitus1 ex- presses it , ) with the Passions and Prejudices of a Contemporary Author , but make an ...
... represented under their proper Characters . Some eminent Historian may then probably arise that will not write recentibus odiis , ( as Tacitus1 ex- presses it , ) with the Passions and Prejudices of a Contemporary Author , but make an ...
Inhoudsopgave
NUMBERS 585635 I | xxii |
THE TEXT 2 9 | cvi |
ERRATA | cxiii |
Copyright | |
2 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquainted Addison admired advertised Aeneid agreeable appear Audience Author Bartholomew Fair Beauty Behaviour Books Buckley Budgell called Character Club Coffee-house contributed Conversation Country Daily Courant Discourse Drury Lane Dryden edition endeavour English essays Eyes frequently Friend Gentleman give Gregory Smith Hand Honour House Humour Isaac Bickerstaff Italian Jacob Tonson John Joseph Addison kind King Lady Learning letter Lillie Little Britain live London look Love Manner Mind Motto Name Nature never Nichols observe Occasion Opera original Ovid papers Passion Person Peter Motteux Pharamond Place play Pleasure poem Poet Pope praise present printed publick published Reader Reason reprinted Roger de Coverley Satires says seems Sense Servant shew Sir Roger Spectator Steele Steele's Subject Tatler thing Thomas Tickell thought Tickell tion told Tonson Tory Verse Virgil volumes Whig whole Woman Women Words World writing written young