The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Bind 4Bell & Daldy, 1872 |
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Side 88
... king's servants , whom they here call the lord - trea- surer , that I had ' eternally obliged him . ' I was so surprised at his gratitude , that I could not forbear saying , ' What ser- vice is there which one man can do for another ...
... king's servants , whom they here call the lord - trea- surer , that I had ' eternally obliged him . ' I was so surprised at his gratitude , that I could not forbear saying , ' What ser- vice is there which one man can do for another ...
Side 99
... king ; as perhaps the most eminent egotist that ever appeared in the world , was Montagne , the author of the celebrated Essays . This lively old Gascon has woven all his bodily infirmities into his works , and after having spoken of ...
... king ; as perhaps the most eminent egotist that ever appeared in the world , was Montagne , the author of the celebrated Essays . This lively old Gascon has woven all his bodily infirmities into his works , and after having spoken of ...
Side 118
... king of Lydia , he thanked him for his kindness , but told him he had already more by half than he knew what to do with . In short , content is equivalent to wealth , and luxury to poverty ; or , to give the thought a more ...
... king of Lydia , he thanked him for his kindness , but told him he had already more by half than he knew what to do with . In short , content is equivalent to wealth , and luxury to poverty ; or , to give the thought a more ...
Side 124
... king's health when he was not a - dry . He would thrust his head out of his chamber - window every morning , and after having gaped for fresh air about half an hour , repeat fifty verses as loud as he could bawl them for the benefit of ...
... king's health when he was not a - dry . He would thrust his head out of his chamber - window every morning , and after having gaped for fresh air about half an hour , repeat fifty verses as loud as he could bawl them for the benefit of ...
Side 148
... King Lear , in order to heighten , or rather to alleviate , the distress of that unfor- tunate prince ; and to serve by way of decoration to a piece which that great critic has written against . I do not , indeed , wonder that the ...
... King Lear , in order to heighten , or rather to alleviate , the distress of that unfor- tunate prince ; and to serve by way of decoration to a piece which that great critic has written against . I do not , indeed , wonder that the ...
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