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Pagina 59
... words , because most of the observations that agree with descriptions are equally applicable to painting and statuary . Words , when well chosen , have so great a force in them , that a description often gives us more lively ideas than ...
... words , because most of the observations that agree with descriptions are equally applicable to painting and statuary . Words , when well chosen , have so great a force in them , that a description often gives us more lively ideas than ...
Pagina 60
... words . For to have a true relish and form a right judgment of a description a man should be born with a good imagination , and must have well weighed the force and energy that lie in the several words of a language , so as to be able ...
... words . For to have a true relish and form a right judgment of a description a man should be born with a good imagination , and must have well weighed the force and energy that lie in the several words of a language , so as to be able ...
Pagina 270
... word that was never heard of ; and , indeed , there is scarce a solecism in writing which the best author is not guilty of , if we may be at liberty to read him in the words of some manuscript , which the laborious editor has thought ...
... word that was never heard of ; and , indeed , there is scarce a solecism in writing which the best author is not guilty of , if we may be at liberty to read him in the words of some manuscript , which the laborious editor has thought ...
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acquainted ADDISON admiration affected agreeable appear beauty behold Callisthenes Cicero colours consider conversation countenance Covent Garden creatures delight desire discourse divine dream dress endeavour entertainment Epig excellent eyes fancy favour fortune garden gentleman give greatest hand happy heart Hockley-in-the-Hole honour hope human humble Servant humour husband Iliad imagination James Miller kind lady letter live look mankind manner marriage matter mind modesty nature never objects obliged observed occasion OVID paper Paradise Lost particular pass passion person Pindar pleased pleasure Plutarch Plutus poet present reader reason received Rechteren reflection Roger de Coverley satisfaction seems Sempronia sense sight Sir Robert Viner soul Spectator SPECTATOR,-I STEELE taste Tatler tell things thou thought tion town TUNBRIDGE VIRG Virgil virtue whole woman women words writing young