The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 4G. Bell, 1882 |
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Side 98
... speak of him- self ( says Cowley ) : it grates his own heart to say anything of disparagement , and the reader's ears to hear anything of praise from him . " Let the tenor of his discourse be what it will , upon this subject , it ...
... speak of him- self ( says Cowley ) : it grates his own heart to say anything of disparagement , and the reader's ears to hear anything of praise from him . " Let the tenor of his discourse be what it will , upon this subject , it ...
Side 254
... speak ill of me , any more than they would believe me should I speak well of you . ' 66 In these , and many other instances I could produce , the bitterness of the answer sufficiently testifies the uneasiness of the mind the person was ...
... speak ill of me , any more than they would believe me should I speak well of you . ' 66 In these , and many other instances I could produce , the bitterness of the answer sufficiently testifies the uneasiness of the mind the person was ...
Side 366
... speaking ; but though he was not so impudent as the Count , he was every whit as sturdy ; and when it came to the Count's turn to speak , old Fact so stared him in the face , after his plain , downright way , that the Count was very ...
... speaking ; but though he was not so impudent as the Count , he was every whit as sturdy ; and when it came to the Count's turn to speak , old Fact so stared him in the face , after his plain , downright way , that the Count was very ...
Indhold
THE SPECTATOR | xi |
Will Honeycombs Proposal of a Fair for Marriage | 22 |
FREEHOLDER | 26 |
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