The Spectator, Volume 4George Gregory Smith Dent, 1966 |
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Pagina 79
... taken off that senseless Ridicule , which for many Years the Witlins of the Town have turned upon their Fathers and Mothers . For my own Part , I was born in Wedlock , and I don't care who knows it : For which Reason , among many others ...
... taken off that senseless Ridicule , which for many Years the Witlins of the Town have turned upon their Fathers and Mothers . For my own Part , I was born in Wedlock , and I don't care who knows it : For which Reason , among many others ...
Pagina 197
... taken for correcting this Practice of false Surprize , is to over - shoot such Talkers in their own Bow , or to raise the Story with further Degrees of Impossibility , and set up for a Voucher to them in such a Manner as must let them ...
... taken for correcting this Practice of false Surprize , is to over - shoot such Talkers in their own Bow , or to raise the Story with further Degrees of Impossibility , and set up for a Voucher to them in such a Manner as must let them ...
Pagina 215
... taken Care of by me , I have quartered upon such as have taken new Leases of me , and added so many Advan- tages during the Lives of the Persons so quartered , that it is the Interest of those whom they are joined with to cherish and ...
... taken Care of by me , I have quartered upon such as have taken new Leases of me , and added so many Advan- tages during the Lives of the Persons so quartered , that it is the Interest of those whom they are joined with to cherish and ...
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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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