The Spectator: With Notes and a General Index, Объемы 1-2J. J. Woodward, 1832 - Всего страниц: 895 |
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Стр. xi
... received from your administration , would be a more proper work for a history , than for an address of this nature . Your lordship appears as great in your private life , as in the most important offices which you have borne . I would ...
... received from your administration , would be a more proper work for a history , than for an address of this nature . Your lordship appears as great in your private life , as in the most important offices which you have borne . I would ...
Стр. 21
... received every hour } The reader will easily suppose , by what has been before said , that the lady on the throne would have been almost frighted to distraction , had she seen but any one of these spectres ; what then must have been her ...
... received every hour } The reader will easily suppose , by what has been before said , that the lady on the throne would have been almost frighted to distraction , had she seen but any one of these spectres ; what then must have been her ...
Стр. 26
... received him among them . The Athenians being suddenly touched with a sense of the Spar- tan virtue and their own degeneracy , gave a thunder of applause ; and the old man cried out , " The Athenians understand what is good , but the ...
... received him among them . The Athenians being suddenly touched with a sense of the Spar- tan virtue and their own degeneracy , gave a thunder of applause ; and the old man cried out , " The Athenians understand what is good , but the ...
Стр. 42
... received as such to this day , That nothing is capable of being well set to music , that is not nonsense . ' This maxim was no sooner received , but we immediately fell to translating the Ita- lian operas ; and as there was no great ...
... received as such to this day , That nothing is capable of being well set to music , that is not nonsense . ' This maxim was no sooner received , but we immediately fell to translating the Ita- lian operas ; and as there was no great ...
Стр. 49
... received them as very great injuries . passage , I think , evidently glances upon For my own part , I would never trust a Aristophanes , who writ a comedy on pur- man that I thought was capable of giving pose to ridicule the discourses ...
... received them as very great injuries . passage , I think , evidently glances upon For my own part , I would never trust a Aristophanes , who writ a comedy on pur- man that I thought was capable of giving pose to ridicule the discourses ...
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acquainted actions admiration Æneid agreeable Alcibiades appear Aristotle audience beauty behaviour character conversation creature delight desire discourse dress endeavour English entertainment eyes fair sex father favour fortune genius gentleman George Etheridge give greatest happy head hear heart honour hope Hudibras humble servant humour Iliad innocent kind lady laugh learned letter live look lover mankind manner marriage means ment mind mirth nature never obliged observed occasion Ovid paper Paradise Lost particular passion person Pharamond Pict pleased pleasure poem poet portunity present proper racter reader reason Roscommon Sappho sense Sir Roger Socrates soul speak Spectator SPECTATOR,-I Telephus tell temper Theodosius thing thor thou thought tion told town tragedy turn verse Virg Virgil virtue whig whole woman women words writing young