The Spectator, Volume 2Dent, 1945 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 59
Pagina 256
... Happiness - I love to talk of him , and never hear him named but with Pleasure and Emotion . I am your Friend and wish you Happiness , but am sorry to see by the Air of your Letter that there are a Set of Women who are got into the ...
... Happiness - I love to talk of him , and never hear him named but with Pleasure and Emotion . I am your Friend and wish you Happiness , but am sorry to see by the Air of your Letter that there are a Set of Women who are got into the ...
Pagina 264
... Happiness is so very precarious , that it wholly depends on the Will of others . We are not only tortured by the Reproaches which are offered us , but are dis- appointed by the Silence of Men when it is unexpected ; and humbled even by ...
... Happiness is so very precarious , that it wholly depends on the Will of others . We are not only tortured by the Reproaches which are offered us , but are dis- appointed by the Silence of Men when it is unexpected ; and humbled even by ...
Pagina 265
... Happiness . Thirdly , Because if we should allow the same Actions to be the proper Instruments , both of acquiring Fame , and of pro- curing this Happiness , they would nevertheless fail in the Attainment of this last End , if they ...
... Happiness . Thirdly , Because if we should allow the same Actions to be the proper Instruments , both of acquiring Fame , and of pro- curing this Happiness , they would nevertheless fail in the Attainment of this last End , if they ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquainted Actions ADDISON Admiration Aeneid agreeable Alcibiades appear Aristotle Author Beauty Behaviour Boileau Character Charles Dieupart Cicero Circumstances consider Conversation Creature Criticks Desire Discourse endeavoured Entertainment Enville Epic Poetry Fable Fame Father Favour Female Fortune Friend Gentleman give greatest Happiness Head Heart Homer Honour hope Horace Hudibras humane humble Servant Humour Husband Iliad Imagination Innocence Juvenal kind Lady Letter live look Love Lover Mankind Manner Mariamne Marriage Matter mean Milton Mind Mistress Motto Nature never Number obliged observe Occasion Opinion Ovid Paper Paradise Lost particular Passion Person Place pleased Pleasure Plutarch Poem Poet Poetica pray present pretend proper publick Reader Reason Renegado Sappho Satyr Sense Sentiments shew Socrates Soul speak SPECTATOR Speculation Spirit STEELE Subject Tatler tell Temper thing Thoughts tion told Town turn Virgil Virtue whole Wife Woman Women Words World write young