The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 2Vernor and Hood; John Walker; Cuthell and Martin; W.J. and J. Richardson; Longman and Rees; R. Lea; and J. and A. Arch. ; T. Maiden, printer, Sherbourn-Lane, 1804 |
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Side 6
A man with great talents , but void of discretion , is like Polyphemus in the fable , strong and blind , endued with an irresistible force , which for want of sight is of no use to him . Though a man has all other perfections ...
A man with great talents , but void of discretion , is like Polyphemus in the fable , strong and blind , endued with an irresistible force , which for want of sight is of no use to him . Though a man has all other perfections ...
Side 76
These and the like virtues are the hidden beauties of a soul , the secret graces which cannot be discovered by a mortal eye , " but make the soul lovely and precious in His sight , from whom no secrets are concealed .
These and the like virtues are the hidden beauties of a soul , the secret graces which cannot be discovered by a mortal eye , " but make the soul lovely and precious in His sight , from whom no secrets are concealed .
Side 88
+ 阐 I am engaged in this Speculation by a sight which I lately met with at the opera . As I was standing in the hinder part of the box , I took notice of a little cluster of women sitting together in the pret tiest coloured hoods that ...
+ 阐 I am engaged in this Speculation by a sight which I lately met with at the opera . As I was standing in the hinder part of the box , I took notice of a little cluster of women sitting together in the pret tiest coloured hoods that ...
Side 91
After the same manner , Æneas makes his first appearance in the Tyrrhene Seas , and within sight of Italy , because the action proposed to be celebrated was that of his settling himself in Latiun . But because it was necessary for the ...
After the same manner , Æneas makes his first appearance in the Tyrrhene Seas , and within sight of Italy , because the action proposed to be celebrated was that of his settling himself in Latiun . But because it was necessary for the ...
Side 94
... because the sight takes it in at once , and has only a confused idea of the whole , and not a distinct idea of all its parts ; if , on the contrary , you should suppose an animal of ten thousand furlongs in length , the eye would be ...
... because the sight takes it in at once , and has only a confused idea of the whole , and not a distinct idea of all its parts ; if , on the contrary , you should suppose an animal of ten thousand furlongs in length , the eye would be ...
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