The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 3George Bell & Son, 1877 |
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Side 24
... looks like a jest up- on their persons . They grow suspicious on their first look- ing in a glass , and are stung with jealousy at the sight of a wrinkle . A handsome fellow immediately alarms them , and everything that looks young or ...
... looks like a jest up- on their persons . They grow suspicious on their first look- ing in a glass , and are stung with jealousy at the sight of a wrinkle . A handsome fellow immediately alarms them , and everything that looks young or ...
Side 110
... look upon cunning to be the accomplishment of little , mean , ungenerous minds . Dis- cretion points out the noblest ends to us , and pursues the most proper and laudable methods of attaining them : cun- ning has only private , selfish ...
... look upon cunning to be the accomplishment of little , mean , ungenerous minds . Dis- cretion points out the noblest ends to us , and pursues the most proper and laudable methods of attaining them : cun- ning has only private , selfish ...
Side 510
... look upon the rest of the ships that were in the same distress , and asked them whether or no Diagoras was on board every vessel in the fleet . We are all involved in the same calamities , and subject to the same accidents ; and when we ...
... look upon the rest of the ships that were in the same distress , and asked them whether or no Diagoras was on board every vessel in the fleet . We are all involved in the same calamities , and subject to the same accidents ; and when we ...
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action Adam admired affection angels appear beautiful body called character circumstances consider conversation critics death delight described desire discover earth English enter everything expression fable fall father give given greater greatest hand happiness head heart heaven Homer human ideas imagination kind language learned letter light likewise live look lost mankind manner means meet mentioned Milton mind nature never notice observed occasion opinion Paradise particular passage passed passion perfection perhaps person pleased pleasure poem poet present produce proper raised reader reason received reflections represented rises says secret seems sense sentiments short sight soul speak speech spirit taken tells temper things thought tion told turn virtue whole writing