The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 4G. Bell, 1882 |
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Side 32
... reader comes in for half of the performance ; everything appears to him like a discovery of his own ; he is busied all the while in applying characters and circumstances , and is in this respect both a reader and a composer . It is no ...
... reader comes in for half of the performance ; everything appears to him like a discovery of his own ; he is busied all the while in applying characters and circumstances , and is in this respect both a reader and a composer . It is no ...
Side 57
... reader will be as much pleased with it as I have been , and that he will consider himself , 1 if he reflects on the several amusements of hope 1 The fable has in it such a wild , but natural simplicity , that I question not but my reader ...
... reader will be as much pleased with it as I have been , and that he will consider himself , 1 if he reflects on the several amusements of hope 1 The fable has in it such a wild , but natural simplicity , that I question not but my reader ...
Side 446
... reader to compare them with the motives which have kindled the pre- sent rebellion in his Majesty's dominions . As this rebellion is of the most criminal nature from its motives , so it is likewise if we consider its consequences ...
... reader to compare them with the motives which have kindled the pre- sent rebellion in his Majesty's dominions . As this rebellion is of the most criminal nature from its motives , so it is likewise if we consider its consequences ...
Indhold
THE SPECTATOR | 1 |
On the Number Dispersion and Religion of | 13 |
FREEHOLDER PAGI | 26 |
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