The SpectatorGeorge Routledge and sons, 1888 - 919 pagina's |
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Pagina xi
... character of King William , that of a glorious captain , and ( what he much more values than the most splendid titles ) that of a sincere and honest man . ' This was the character of William which , when , in days of meaner public ...
... character of King William , that of a glorious captain , and ( what he much more values than the most splendid titles ) that of a sincere and honest man . ' This was the character of William which , when , in days of meaner public ...
Pagina xiv
... character of the free - thinking ex- quisite is drawn from life without exaggeration , but with more than a touch of the bitter contempt Addison felt for the atheistic coxcomb , with whom he was too ready to confound the sincere ...
... character of the free - thinking ex- quisite is drawn from life without exaggeration , but with more than a touch of the bitter contempt Addison felt for the atheistic coxcomb , with whom he was too ready to confound the sincere ...
Pagina 366
... Character . After all it must be confess'd , that a noble and They publish their ill - natur'd Discoveries with a triumphant Merit often breaks through and dissi- secret Pride , and applaud themselves for the Sin - pates these little ...
... Character . After all it must be confess'd , that a noble and They publish their ill - natur'd Discoveries with a triumphant Merit often breaks through and dissi- secret Pride , and applaud themselves for the Sin - pates these little ...
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Acquaintance Actions Addison Admiration Æneid agreeable Alcibiades appear Aristotle Author Beauty Behaviour Body called Character Club Conversation Country Creature Death desire Discourse Dress Drury Lane endeavour English Entertainment Epic Poetry Eyes Father Favour Fortune Friend Genius Gentleman give happy Head Heart Honour hope House Hudibras human humble Servant Humour Iliad Julius Cæsar kind King Lady Letter live look Love Lover Mankind manner Marriage Matter mean Mind Musick Name Nature never Number obliged observe Occasion Opera Ovid Paper Paradise Lost particular pass Passion Person Pharamond Pict Place Plato Play pleased Pleasure Poem Poet present publick racter Reader Reason Sappho Satyr Sense shew Sir ROGER Socrates Soul speak SPECTATOR Spirit Steele Subject Tatler tell Temper thing thou thought tion told Town turn Verse Virg Virgil Virtue Whig whole Woman Women Words World write young