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 4
Who does thy tender heart subdue ; Tell me , my Sappho , tell me who ? VI . Tho ' now he shuns thy longing arms , He soon shall court thy slighted charms ; Tho ' now thy off'rings he despise , He soon to thee shall sacrifice ; Tho ' now ...
Who does thy tender heart subdue ; Tell me , my Sappho , tell me who ? VI . Tho ' now he shuns thy longing arms , He soon shall court thy slighted charms ; Tho ' now thy off'rings he despise , He soon to thee shall sacrifice ; Tho ' now ...
Side 11
To give you the heads of it ; a young gentleman , after having made his applications to me for three years together , and filled my head with a thousand dreams of happiness , some few days since married another . Pray tell me in what ...
To give you the heads of it ; a young gentleman , after having made his applications to me for three years together , and filled my head with a thousand dreams of happiness , some few days since married another . Pray tell me in what ...
Side 12
... so when I am in my melancholies , and I do throw myself from it , I do desire my fery good friend to tell me in his Spictatur , if I shall be cure of my griefous lofes ; for there is the sea clear as class , and as creen as the leek ...
... so when I am in my melancholies , and I do throw myself from it , I do desire my fery good friend to tell me in his Spictatur , if I shall be cure of my griefous lofes ; for there is the sea clear as class , and as creen as the leek ...
Side 16
... and ( not daring to discover his passion ) pretended to be confined to his bed by sickness , tells us , that Erasistratus , the physician , found out the nature of his distemper by those symptoms of love which he had learnt from ...
... and ( not daring to discover his passion ) pretended to be confined to his bed by sickness , tells us , that Erasistratus , the physician , found out the nature of his distemper by those symptoms of love which he had learnt from ...
Side 18
Cicero tells us , that he never liked an orator , who did not appear in some little confusion at the beginning of his speech , and confesses that he himself never entered upon an oration without trembling and concern .
Cicero tells us , that he never liked an orator , who did not appear in some little confusion at the beginning of his speech , and confesses that he himself never entered upon an oration without trembling and concern .
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