The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 3G. Bell, 1882 |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-3 af 80
Side 106
... taken up alive . This place was therefore called The Lover's Leap ; and whether or no the fright they had been in , or the resolution that could push them to so dreadful a remedy , or the bruises which they often received in their fall ...
... taken up alive . This place was therefore called The Lover's Leap ; and whether or no the fright they had been in , or the resolution that could push them to so dreadful a remedy , or the bruises which they often received in their fall ...
Side 224
... taken the liberty sometimes to join with one , and some- times with another , and sometimes to differ from all of them , when I have thought that the reason of the thing was on my side . We may consider the beauties of the fourth book ...
... taken the liberty sometimes to join with one , and some- times with another , and sometimes to differ from all of them , when I have thought that the reason of the thing was on my side . We may consider the beauties of the fourth book ...
Side 282
... taken a great deal of pains to fix the number of months or days contained in the action of each of those poems . If any one thinks it worth his while to examine this particular in Milton , he will find , that from Adam's first ap ...
... taken a great deal of pains to fix the number of months or days contained in the action of each of those poems . If any one thinks it worth his while to examine this particular in Milton , he will find , that from Adam's first ap ...
Indhold
Use of MottosLove of Latin among the Common PeopleSignature Letters | 1 |
Letter on BashfulnessReflections on Modesty 225 Discretion and Cunning | 109 |
Letter on the Lovers Leap 229 Fragment of Sappho | 115 |
83 andre sektioner vises ikke
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
action Adam Adam and Eve admirable Æneid agreeable Alcibiades allegory ancient angels appear Aristotle beautiful behaviour character circumstances colours consider conversation critics death delight described discourse discover Divine earth Edition endeavoured English everything fable fallen angels fame fancy father give happiness head heart heaven Homer honour human humour Iliad imagination Jupiter kind letter likewise live look mankind manner Mariamne marriage means Milton mind moral nature neral never noble observed occasion opinion Ovid pains paper Paradise Lost particular passage passion perfection person pleased pleasure poem poet poetry proper raised reader reason religion renegado ridicule Sappho Satan says secret sentiments short Socrates soul species speech spirit sublime take notice tells temper thee Theodosius things thou thought tion told Translated verse VIRG Virgil virtue vols whole words writing