The Spectator, Volume 1George Gregory Smith Dent, 1945 |
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Pagina 114
... Mind has nothing presented to it but what is immediately followed by a Re- flection or Conscience , which tells you whether that which was so presented is graceful or unbecoming . This Act of the Mind discovers it self in the Gesture ...
... Mind has nothing presented to it but what is immediately followed by a Re- flection or Conscience , which tells you whether that which was so presented is graceful or unbecoming . This Act of the Mind discovers it self in the Gesture ...
Pagina 356
... Mind that is careful to avoid Errors and Prepossessions . When the Arguments press equally on both sides in Matters that are indifferent to us , the safest Method is to give up our selves to neither . It is with this Temper of Mind that ...
... Mind that is careful to avoid Errors and Prepossessions . When the Arguments press equally on both sides in Matters that are indifferent to us , the safest Method is to give up our selves to neither . It is with this Temper of Mind that ...
Pagina 502
... Mind of the first Being ; and that those Ideas which are in the Mind of Man , are a Transcript of the World : To this we may add , that Words are the Transcript of those Ideas which are in the Mind of Man , and that Writing or Printing ...
... Mind of the first Being ; and that those Ideas which are in the Mind of Man , are a Transcript of the World : To this we may add , that Words are the Transcript of those Ideas which are in the Mind of Man , and that Writing or Printing ...
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Account Acquaintance ADDISON Admiration Aeneid agreeable appear Aristotle Audience Author Beauty Behaviour Body Character Club Coffee-house Company Conversation Country Creature Delight Discourse Dress Dunciad endeavour English Entertainment Ephesian Matron Epigrams Eudoxus Eyes fair Sex Favour Fortune Friend Genius Gentleman Georgics give greatest hear heard Heart Henry Morley Honour Horace Hudibras humble Servant Humour Italian Juvenal kind King Lady Learning Letter live look Love Lover Mankind manner Master Mind Motto Musick Nation Nature never Night Number observed Occasion Opera ordinary Ovid Paper particular Passion Persius Person Pharamond Pict Place Play pleased Pleasure Poets present publick Reader Reason Satires Satyr Sense shew Sir ROGER speak SPECTATOR STEELE Subject talk Tatler tell Temper Theodosius thing thou thought tion told Town Tragedy Tryphiodorus Verses Virgil Virtue Whig whole Woman Women Words World Writings young