The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 4G. Bell, 1882 |
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Side 14
... consider- ing it as persecuted or contemned over the face of the whole earth . This is likewise the more remarkable , if we consider the frequent apostasies of this people , when they lived under their kings in the Land of Promise , and ...
... consider- ing it as persecuted or contemned over the face of the whole earth . This is likewise the more remarkable , if we consider the frequent apostasies of this people , when they lived under their kings in the Land of Promise , and ...
Side 57
... consider himself , 1 if he reflects on the several amusements of hope The fable has in it such a wild , but natural simplicity , that I question not but my reader will be as much pleased with it as I have been , and that he will consider ...
... consider himself , 1 if he reflects on the several amusements of hope The fable has in it such a wild , but natural simplicity , that I question not but my reader will be as much pleased with it as I have been , and that he will consider ...
Side 143
... consider infinite space as an expansion without a cir- cumference : we consider eternity , or infinite duration , as a line that has neither beginning nor an end . In our specu- lations of infinite space , we consider that particular ...
... consider infinite space as an expansion without a cir- cumference : we consider eternity , or infinite duration , as a line that has neither beginning nor an end . In our specu- lations of infinite space , we consider that particular ...
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acquainted Æsop agreeable ants appeared beauty body called club consider conversation Covent Garden creatures daughter death discourse discover Divine duke of Anjou endeavour entertained eternity faculties female forbear French gentleman give greatest hand happiness head hear heart Helim Hilpa honour human humour husband infinite Ironside Julius Cæsar kind king ladies late learned letter lion live look Lucretius manner marriage mattadores matter means mention mind Mishpach Momus nation nature Nestor never obliged observed occasion ourselves Ovid paper particular perfection person pleased pleasure Plutarch poet present reader reason religion Rhadamanthus Roman triumph says servant Shalum short soul Spanish monarchy speak species Spectator Statius Tatler tell thee thou thought tion Tirzah tural VIRG virtue Whig whole woman women words writing young Zilpah