The Spectator: With Notes, and a General Index ...S. Marks, 1826 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 100
Página 318
... hear you ; you will make me for- growing so deep in the heart of man , that the get that you are a gentleman ; I would not affectation outlives the practice of it . You willingly lose you as a friend ; " and the like must have observed ...
... hear you ; you will make me for- growing so deep in the heart of man , that the get that you are a gentleman ; I would not affectation outlives the practice of it . You willingly lose you as a friend ; " and the like must have observed ...
Página 10
... hear you ; you will make me for- growing so deep in the heart of man , that the get that you are a gentleman ; I would not affectation outlives the practice of it . You willingly lose you as a friend ; " and the like must have observed ...
... hear you ; you will make me for- growing so deep in the heart of man , that the get that you are a gentleman ; I would not affectation outlives the practice of it . You willingly lose you as a friend ; " and the like must have observed ...
Página 37
... hear him , at the conclusion of almost sion to moralize ( in his way ) upon an evil every scene , telling me that he could not conscience , adding , that Orestes , in his mad- imagine how the play would end . One while ness , looked as ...
... hear him , at the conclusion of almost sion to moralize ( in his way ) upon an evil every scene , telling me that he could not conscience , adding , that Orestes , in his mad- imagine how the play would end . One while ness , looked as ...
Página 38
... hear freshed : I will open my lips and answer . Let them speak obscurely , or reason preposter- me not , I pray you , accept any man's person , ously ( into which absurdities , prejudice , pride , neither let me give flattering titles ...
... hear freshed : I will open my lips and answer . Let them speak obscurely , or reason preposter- me not , I pray you , accept any man's person , ously ( into which absurdities , prejudice , pride , neither let me give flattering titles ...
Página 40
... hear such re- Hections on the several incidents of the play as pure nature suggested , and from the other , such as flowed from the exactest art , and judgment : though I must confess that my cu- riosity led me so much to observe the ...
... hear such re- Hections on the several incidents of the play as pure nature suggested , and from the other , such as flowed from the exactest art , and judgment : though I must confess that my cu- riosity led me so much to observe the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Spectator: With Notes, and a General Index : the Eight Volumes Comprised ... Vista completa - 1811 |
Términos y frases comunes
acquaintance admiration Æneid agreeable appear beauty behold body called cern character Cicero consider conversation creature dæmon death delight desire discourse divine endeavour entertainment eyes fancy favour fortune gentleman give hand happy hath head hear heart heaven Homer honour hope human humble servant humour husband Iliad imagination Julius Cæsar Jupiter kind lady learning letter live look lover mankind manner marriage married matter ment mind Mohocks nature neral ness never night obliged observed occasion Ovid pain paper Paradise Lost particular pass passion person pleased pleasure Plutarch poem poet present racter reader reason received Rechteren Roscommon sight sion soul speak SPECTATOR spirit tell thee thing thor thou thought tion told town tural Virg Virgil virtue whig whole woman words writing yard land young