The Sir Roger de Coverley Papers, from "The Spectator"Longmans, Green, and Company, 1896 - 174 páginas |
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Página xvii
... writers of his time . This continued until 1713. At first it was weekly , then semi - weekly , and then , as the demand increased , tri- weekly . It contained news , both foreign and domestic , but had a corner devoted to matters in ...
... writers of his time . This continued until 1713. At first it was weekly , then semi - weekly , and then , as the demand increased , tri- weekly . It contained news , both foreign and domestic , but had a corner devoted to matters in ...
Página xxii
... writers who " do not treat of minerals and fossils , of the virtues of plants or the influence of plan- ets , " but " make us familiar with the world of men and women , record their actions , assign their motives , exhibit their whims ...
... writers who " do not treat of minerals and fossils , of the virtues of plants or the influence of plan- ets , " but " make us familiar with the world of men and women , record their actions , assign their motives , exhibit their whims ...
Página xxiii
... writer says that the Spectator " civilized England more , perhaps , than any one book . " 1 Another declares that " It is not so very much of a hyperbole to call the English eighteenth century the century of the Spec- tator ; and it may ...
... writer says that the Spectator " civilized England more , perhaps , than any one book . " 1 Another declares that " It is not so very much of a hyperbole to call the English eighteenth century the century of the Spec- tator ; and it may ...
Página xxvii
... writing the concluding act of " Cato , " a tragedy of which he is believed to have elaborated the greater part during his continental travels , from a plan which he had sketched while still at Oxford . In April , the play was produced ...
... writing the concluding act of " Cato , " a tragedy of which he is believed to have elaborated the greater part during his continental travels , from a plan which he had sketched while still at Oxford . In April , the play was produced ...
Página xxxiii
... writers of reputation lent their influence to keep it so . Steele took a noble stand and wrote several comedies far above the level of his age . They were not great works : the style is often unnatural and prosy , but they deserve ...
... writers of reputation lent their influence to keep it so . Steele took a noble stand and wrote several comedies far above the level of his age . They were not great works : the style is often unnatural and prosy , but they deserve ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Sir Roger de Coverley Papers in the Spectator Joseph Addison,Sir Richard Steele,Eustace Budgell Vista completa - 1906 |
Términos y frases comunes
appeared Battle of Blenheim beauty behavior better Bickerstaff born called Cato character club College Countess of Warwick court Coverley papers death died discourse Dryden Edited England English Essay Eudoxus famous father followed fortune friend Sir Roger gentleman give hear honest honor humor introduction and notes Isaac Bickerstaff JOSEPH ADDISON kind lady Leontine literary literature lives London look Macaulay manner master ment mind Moll White nature never numbers observe particular Partridge pass passion person pleased pleasure poem political Pope Portrait Professor Queen Anne reader reason Richard Steele Roger de Coverley Roxbury Latin School satire says Sir Roger School seems sense servant Sir Andrew South Sea Bubble Spectator spirit Steele's Swift Tatler tell thee thou thought tion told town VIRGIL Whig whole widow Wimble woman writing wrote young