The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison: The Spectator, no. 162-483G. Bell and sons, 1912 |
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Side 12
... present war has so adul terated our tongue with strange words , that it would be im- possible for one of our great - grandfathers to know what his When the reader has felt the pathos of this little melancholy story may be worth his ...
... present war has so adul terated our tongue with strange words , that it would be im- possible for one of our great - grandfathers to know what his When the reader has felt the pathos of this little melancholy story may be worth his ...
Side 14
... present my reader with a copy of it . " SIR , Upon the junction of the French and Bavarian armies they took post behind a great morass which they thought im- practicable . Our general the next day sent a party of horse to reconnoitre ...
... present my reader with a copy of it . " SIR , Upon the junction of the French and Bavarian armies they took post behind a great morass which they thought im- practicable . Our general the next day sent a party of horse to reconnoitre ...
Side 16
... presents to the posterity of those who are yet unborn . All other arts of perpetuating our ideas continue but a short ... present ; the names of great statuaries , architects , and painters , whose works are lost . The several arts are ...
... presents to the posterity of those who are yet unborn . All other arts of perpetuating our ideas continue but a short ... present ; the names of great statuaries , architects , and painters , whose works are lost . The several arts are ...
Side 32
... present at this great controversy of faces , in order to make a collection of the most remarkable grins that shall be there exhibited . I must not here omit an account which I lately received of one of these grinning matches from a ...
... present at this great controversy of faces , in order to make a collection of the most remarkable grins that shall be there exhibited . I must not here omit an account which I lately received of one of these grinning matches from a ...
Side 39
... present them- selves , which could not fail to please the ordinary taste of mankind , but are stifled in their birth by reason of some re- mote tendency which they carry in them to corrupt the minds of those who read them ; did they ...
... present them- selves , which could not fail to please the ordinary taste of mankind , but are stifled in their birth by reason of some re- mote tendency which they carry in them to corrupt the minds of those who read them ; did they ...
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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