The Spectator, Svazek 2Donald Frederic Bond Clarendon Press, 1965 |
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Strana 80
... proper therefore to trace the Original and Signification of this Word . ' Cant is , by some People , derived from one Andrew Cant who , they say , was a Presbyterian Minister in some Illiterate part of Scotland , who by Exercise and Use ...
... proper therefore to trace the Original and Signification of this Word . ' Cant is , by some People , derived from one Andrew Cant who , they say , was a Presbyterian Minister in some Illiterate part of Scotland , who by Exercise and Use ...
Strana 376
... proper Times and Places , and turns them to the Advantage of the Person who is possessed of them . Without it Learning is Pedantry , and Wit Impertinence ; Vertue it self looks like Weakness ; the best Parts only qualifie a Man to be ...
... proper Times and Places , and turns them to the Advantage of the Person who is possessed of them . Without it Learning is Pedantry , and Wit Impertinence ; Vertue it self looks like Weakness ; the best Parts only qualifie a Man to be ...
Strana 377
... proper Happiness of his Nature , and the ultimate Design of his Being . He carries his Thoughts to the End of every Action , and considers the most distant as well as the most immediate Effects of it . He super- cedes1 every little ...
... proper Happiness of his Nature , and the ultimate Design of his Being . He carries his Thoughts to the End of every Action , and considers the most distant as well as the most immediate Effects of it . He super- cedes1 every little ...
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