The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison: The Spectator, no. 162-483G. Bell and sons, 1912 |
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Side 104
... Adam , Sheth , Enosh . Ile divided this short text into many parts , and discovering several mysteries in each word , made a most learned and elaborate discourse . The name of this profound preacher was Doctor Alabaster , of whom the ...
... Adam , Sheth , Enosh . Ile divided this short text into many parts , and discovering several mysteries in each word , made a most learned and elaborate discourse . The name of this profound preacher was Doctor Alabaster , of whom the ...
Side 146
... Adam could not laugh before the fall . Laughter , while it lasts , slackens and unbraces the mind , weakens the faculties , and causes a kind of remissness and dissolution in all the powers of the soul : and thus far it may be looked ...
... Adam could not laugh before the fall . Laughter , while it lasts , slackens and unbraces the mind , weakens the faculties , and causes a kind of remissness and dissolution in all the powers of the soul : and thus far it may be looked ...
Side 176
... Adam is not Æneas , nor Eve , Helen . 1 These papers on Milton , being dictated by taste , and written with elegance , were extremely well received by the public . It was taken for granted that these necessary qualities were , of ...
... Adam is not Æneas , nor Eve , Helen . 1 These papers on Milton , being dictated by taste , and written with elegance , were extremely well received by the public . It was taken for granted that these necessary qualities were , of ...
Side 186
... Adam and Eve , before the fall , are a different species from that of mankind who are descended from them ; and none but a poet of the most unbounded invention , and the most exquisite judgment , could have filled their conversation and ...
... Adam and Eve , before the fall , are a different species from that of mankind who are descended from them ; and none but a poet of the most unbounded invention , and the most exquisite judgment , could have filled their conversation and ...
Side 190
... Adam and Eve : Adam the goodliest man of men since born His sons , the fairest of her daughters Eve . It is plain , that in the former of these passages , according to the natural syntax , the divine persons mentioned in the first line ...
... Adam and Eve : Adam the goodliest man of men since born His sons , the fairest of her daughters Eve . It is plain , that in the former of these passages , according to the natural syntax , the divine persons mentioned in the first line ...
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action Adam Adam and Eve admirable Æneid agreeable Alcibiades ancient angels appear Aristotle beautiful called character colours consider conversation critics death delight described discourse discover Divine earth Edited endeavoured English entertainment Enville everything fable fallen angels fancy father filled give happiness head heart heaven Homer honour humour ideas Iliad imagination Jupiter kind letter likewise live look mankind manner Mariamne marriage means Milton mind moral nature neral never noble observed occasion opinion Ovid paper Paradise Lost particular passage passion perfection person pleased pleasure poem poet poetry proper raised reader reason received religion renegado Sappho Satan says secret sentiments short Sir Roger Socrates soul species speech spirit sublime take notice tells temper thee Theodosius things thou thought tion told Translated turn verse VIRG Virgil virtue vols whole words writing