The Spectator, Svazek 2Donald Frederic Bond Clarendon Press, 1965 |
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Výsledky 1-3 z 72
Strana 165
... nature , and which I shall chuse for the Subject of this Day's Speculation . Good - nature is more agreeable in Conversation than Wit , and gives a certain Air to the Countenance which is more amiable than Beauty . It shows Virtue in ...
... nature , and which I shall chuse for the Subject of this Day's Speculation . Good - nature is more agreeable in Conversation than Wit , and gives a certain Air to the Countenance which is more amiable than Beauty . It shows Virtue in ...
Strana 197
... nature however in the Constitution , which Mr. Dryden somewhere calls a Milkiness of Blood , 3 is an admirable Ground - work for the other . In order there- fore to try our Good - nature , whether it arises from the Body or the Mind ...
... nature however in the Constitution , which Mr. Dryden somewhere calls a Milkiness of Blood , 3 is an admirable Ground - work for the other . In order there- fore to try our Good - nature , whether it arises from the Body or the Mind ...
Strana 531
... Nature has lavished all her Ornaments upon the Male , who very often appears in a most beautiful Head - dress : Whether it be a Crest , a Comb , a Tuft of Feathers , or a natural little Plume , erected like a kind of Pinacle on the very ...
... Nature has lavished all her Ornaments upon the Male , who very often appears in a most beautiful Head - dress : Whether it be a Crest , a Comb , a Tuft of Feathers , or a natural little Plume , erected like a kind of Pinacle on the very ...
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¹ Motto acquainted Actions Addison admired advertised Aeneid Æsop agreeable Alcibiades appear Aristotle Author Beauty Behaviour bumble Servant Character Cicero Constantia Conversation Country Creature Daily Courant desire Diogenes Laertius Discourse Dress Dryden endeavour Entertainment essay Eyes Fable Fame Father Favour Fortune Friend Genius Gentleman give happy Heart Homer Honour hope Horace Hudibras Human Humour Husband Iliad Imagination impertinent Innocence kind Lady Letter live look Love Lover Mankind manner Mariamne Marriage Matter Mind Nature never obliged observe Occasion Ovid Paper Paradise Lost particular Passion Person Place Plato pleased Pleasure Plutarch Poem Praise present Publick Reader Reason ridiculous Sappho Satyr Sense shew Sir ROGER Socrates Soul speak SPECTATOR STEELE Subject Tatler tell Temper Theodosius thing thou thought tion Town Virg Virgil Virtue Whig whole Woman Women Word World write young Youth