The Spectator, Svazek 2S. Marks, 1826 |
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Výsledky 1-5 z 100
Strana 6
... nature . Death , and some of the imaginary persons in his chaos . These passages are astonishing , but not credible ; the reader cannot so far impose upon himself as to see a possibility in them ; theyare the description of dreams and ...
... nature . Death , and some of the imaginary persons in his chaos . These passages are astonishing , but not credible ; the reader cannot so far impose upon himself as to see a possibility in them ; theyare the description of dreams and ...
Strana 8
... nature of the part they are engaged in , and age has produced thought far otherwise ; for what figure it will make in the minds of those who can think either Socrates or Demosthenes they leave behind them , whether it was worth lost any ...
... nature of the part they are engaged in , and age has produced thought far otherwise ; for what figure it will make in the minds of those who can think either Socrates or Demosthenes they leave behind them , whether it was worth lost any ...
Strana 23
... nature's desire , In whose sight all things joy , with ravishment , Attracted by thy beauty still to gaze ! ' An injudicious poet would have made Adam discomposure in her looks . The posture in talk through the whole work in such ...
... nature's desire , In whose sight all things joy , with ravishment , Attracted by thy beauty still to gaze ! ' An injudicious poet would have made Adam discomposure in her looks . The posture in talk through the whole work in such ...
Strana 35
... natural to some men ; but even these would together uncultivated , and is unhappily fallen be highly more graceful in their carriage , if under the imputation of illiterate and mechanic . what they do from the force of nature were con ...
... natural to some men ; but even these would together uncultivated , and is unhappily fallen be highly more graceful in their carriage , if under the imputation of illiterate and mechanic . what they do from the force of nature were con ...
Strana 40
... 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 knights , reflections , that I was not well at leisure to improve ...
... 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 knights , reflections , that I was not well at leisure to improve ...
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