The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 3G. Bell, 1882 |
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Side 71
... tion , is a cold , lifeless , insipid condition of virtue ; and is rather to be styled philosophy than religion . Devotion opens the mind to great conceptions , and fills it with more sublime ideas than any that are to be met with in ...
... tion , is a cold , lifeless , insipid condition of virtue ; and is rather to be styled philosophy than religion . Devotion opens the mind to great conceptions , and fills it with more sublime ideas than any that are to be met with in ...
Side 165
... tion of any other being . In the first place , no other being can make a right judg ment of us , and esteem us according to our merits . Created beings see nothing but our outside , and can therefore only frame a judgment of us from our ...
... tion of any other being . In the first place , no other being can make a right judg ment of us , and esteem us according to our merits . Created beings see nothing but our outside , and can therefore only frame a judgment of us from our ...
Side 220
... tion , between that mass of matter which was wrought into a world , and that shapeless , unformed heap of materials , which still lay in chaos and confusion , strikes the imagina- tion with something astonishingly great and wild . I ...
... tion , between that mass of matter which was wrought into a world , and that shapeless , unformed heap of materials , which still lay in chaos and confusion , strikes the imagina- tion with something astonishingly great and wild . I ...
Indhold
THE SPECTATOR | 1 |
Account of SapphoHer Hymn to Venus 225 Discretion and Cunning | 109 |
Letter on the Lovers Leap 229 Fragment of Sappho | 115 |
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action Adam Adam and Eve admirable Æneid agreeable Alcibiades ancient angels appear Aristotle beautiful behaviour called Castilian character circumstances colours consider Constantia conversation critics death delight discourse discover Divine endeavoured English entertainment everything fable fancy father give happiness head heart heaven Homer honour human humour Iliad imagination Jupiter kind leap letter likewise live look Lover's Leap mankind manner Mariamne marriage means mentioned Milton mind moral nature neral never observed occasion opinion Ovid pains paper Paradise Paradise Lost particular passage passion perfection person pleased pleasure Plutarch poem poet poetry proper reader reason religion renegado ridicule Sappho Satan says secret sentiments short Socrates soul species SPECTATOR speech spirit sublime take notice tells temper thee Theodosius things thought tion told verse vicious VIRG Virgil virtue vols whole words writing