The Works of Joseph Addison: The SpectatorG.P. Putnam & Company, 1854 |
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الصفحة 18
... sight , from whom no secrets are concealed . Again , there are many virtues which want an opportunity of exerting and shewing themselves in actions . Every virtue requires time and place , a proper object , and a fit conjuncture of ...
... sight , from whom no secrets are concealed . Again , there are many virtues which want an opportunity of exerting and shewing themselves in actions . Every virtue requires time and place , a proper object , and a fit conjuncture of ...
الصفحة 30
... sight which I lately met with at the opera . As I was standing in the hinder part of the box , I took notice of a little cluster of women sitting together in the prettiest coloured hoods that I ever saw . One of them was blue , another ...
... sight which I lately met with at the opera . As I was standing in the hinder part of the box , I took notice of a little cluster of women sitting together in the prettiest coloured hoods that I ever saw . One of them was blue , another ...
الصفحة 33
... sight of Italy , because the action proposed to be celebrated was that of his settling himself in Latium . But because it was necessary for the reader to know what had happened to him in the taking of Troy , and in the pre- ceding parts ...
... sight of Italy , because the action proposed to be celebrated was that of his settling himself in Latium . But because it was necessary for the reader to know what had happened to him in the taking of Troy , and in the pre- ceding parts ...
الصفحة 36
... sight takes it in at once , and has only a con- fused idea of the whole , and not a distinct idea of all its parts ; if , on the contrary , you should suppose an animal of ten thou- sand furlongs in length , the eye would be so filled ...
... sight takes it in at once , and has only a con- fused idea of the whole , and not a distinct idea of all its parts ; if , on the contrary , you should suppose an animal of ten thou- sand furlongs in length , the eye would be so filled ...
الصفحة 76
... sight , Ye gods who rule the regions of the night , Ye gliding ghosts , permit me to relate The mystic wonders of your silent state . DRYDEN . Every circumstance in their justness and delicacy adapted As the poet very much excels I HAVE ...
... sight , Ye gods who rule the regions of the night , Ye gliding ghosts , permit me to relate The mystic wonders of your silent state . DRYDEN . Every circumstance in their justness and delicacy adapted As the poet very much excels I HAVE ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
action Adam Adam and Eve Æneid agreeable allegory angels appear Aristotle beautiful behold character chearfulness circumstances colours consider conversation death delight discourse divine DRYDEN earth endeavoured English entertainment Enville fable fallen angels fancy filled garden give greatest hand happy head heart heaven Homer honour ideas Iliad imagination Jupiter kind king lady learning likewise live look mankind manner Menippus Milton mind Mohocks morality nature never night noble objects observed occasion Ovid paper Paradise Lost particular passage passion perfection person pleased pleasure Plutarch Plutus poem poet poetry proper reader reason received Rechteren represented ROSCOMMON Satan says secret sentiments shew sight Sir Roger soul Spectator speech spirit sublime take notice Tatler tells thee thing thou thought tion told verse VIRG Virgil virtue whig whole words writing