The Spectator, Volume 4George Gregory Smith Dent, 1966 |
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Pagina 12
... Place in my Garden . By this Means , when a Stranger walks with me , he is surprized to see several large Spots of Ground covered with ten thousand different Colours , and has often singled out Flowers that he might have met with under ...
... Place in my Garden . By this Means , when a Stranger walks with me , he is surprized to see several large Spots of Ground covered with ten thousand different Colours , and has often singled out Flowers that he might have met with under ...
Pagina 106
... Place . Thus it is , especially on the Evening - Change ; so that what with the Din of Squalings , Oaths , and Cries of Beggars , Men of greatest Consequence in our City absent themselves from the Place . This Particular , by the Way ...
... Place . Thus it is , especially on the Evening - Change ; so that what with the Din of Squalings , Oaths , and Cries of Beggars , Men of greatest Consequence in our City absent themselves from the Place . This Particular , by the Way ...
Pagina 323
... Place is transcendent beyond Imagina- tion , so probably is the Extent of it . There is Light behind Light , and Glory within Glory . How far that Space may reach , in which God thus appears in perfect Majesty , we cannot possibly ...
... Place is transcendent beyond Imagina- tion , so probably is the Extent of it . There is Light behind Light , and Glory within Glory . How far that Space may reach , in which God thus appears in perfect Majesty , we cannot possibly ...
Inhoudsopgave
talk these Things of You and You cannot hide from us | 8 |
CONTENTS | 320 |
Essays Nos 556635 Friday June | 447 |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquainted ADDISON Admirer Aeneid agreeable appear Author Beauty Body Britomartis Character Cicero Cities of London consider Conversation Country Creature Delight Desire Discourse Divine Drachmas Dreams endeavour Entertainment Epigram Eternity Eunuchus Eustace Budgell Eyes Fancy Favour Fortune Friend Gentleman Georgics give greatest Hand Happiness hath hear heard Heart Herodotus Honour hope Horace Human humble Servant Humour Husband imagine infinite Isaac Newton Juvenal kind Lady Letter live look Love Lover Mankind Manner Marriage married Matter Mind Motto Name Nature never Number obliged observed Occasion Ovid Pain Paper particular Passion Person Pharamond Place pleased Pleasure Plutarch present pretty Publick Reader Reason received Rechteren Rhaecus Satyr Shalum shew Soul speak SPECTATOR STEELE Subject surprized Tatler tell thing thou thought tion Tirzah told Town Trophonius Truth Virgil Virtue Whig whole Wife Woman Words World write young