The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison: The Spectator, no. 162-483G. Bell and sons, 1912 |
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Side 12
... reader has felt the pathos of this little melancholy story may be worth his while to go over it again , and see if it be not told through out in the purest English . posterity have been doing , were he to read their 12 ADDISON S WORKS .
... reader has felt the pathos of this little melancholy story may be worth his while to go over it again , and see if it be not told through out in the purest English . posterity have been doing , were he to read their 12 ADDISON S WORKS .
Side 36
... reader with the same emphasis as they are delivered by the author , we needed not those volumes of instructions , but might be honest by an epitome . " This passage of Scripture is indeed wonderfully persuasive ; but I think the same ...
... reader with the same emphasis as they are delivered by the author , we needed not those volumes of instructions , but might be honest by an epitome . " This passage of Scripture is indeed wonderfully persuasive ; but I think the same ...
Side 38
... reader , who takes up my paper in order to be diverted , very often finds himself engaged unawares in a serious and profitable course of think- ing ; as , on the contrary , the thoughtful man , who perhaps may hope to find something ...
... reader , who takes up my paper in order to be diverted , very often finds himself engaged unawares in a serious and profitable course of think- ing ; as , on the contrary , the thoughtful man , who perhaps may hope to find something ...
Side 45
... reader in mind of Horace , the greatest wit and critic in the Augustan age ; and of Boileau , the most correct poet among the moderns : not to mention La Fontaine , who , by this way of writing , is come more into vogue than any other ...
... reader in mind of Horace , the greatest wit and critic in the Augustan age ; and of Boileau , the most correct poet among the moderns : not to mention La Fontaine , who , by this way of writing , is come more into vogue than any other ...
Side 46
... reader with a fable of this kind , which I design as the entertainment of the present paper , I must in a few words open the occasion of it . In the account which Plato gives us of the conversation and behaviour of Socrates , the ...
... reader with a fable of this kind , which I design as the entertainment of the present paper , I must in a few words open the occasion of it . In the account which Plato gives us of the conversation and behaviour of Socrates , the ...
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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