The Spectator, Svazek 3Dent, 1945 |
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Strana 43
... agreeable as he who sits by him without any of those Advantages . When we read we do it without any exerted Act of Memory that presents the Shape of the Letters ; but Habit makes us do it mechanically , without staying , like Children ...
... agreeable as he who sits by him without any of those Advantages . When we read we do it without any exerted Act of Memory that presents the Shape of the Letters ; but Habit makes us do it mechanically , without staying , like Children ...
Strana 209
... agreeable Sensation . Let the Cause be what it will , the Effect is certain , for which Reason the Poets ascribe to this particular Colour the Epithet of Chearful . To consider further this double End in the Works of Nature , and how ...
... agreeable Sensation . Let the Cause be what it will , the Effect is certain , for which Reason the Poets ascribe to this particular Colour the Epithet of Chearful . To consider further this double End in the Works of Nature , and how ...
Strana 286
... agreeable Mixture of Garden and Forest , which repre- sent every where an artificial Rudeness , much more charming than that Neatness and Elegancy which we meet with in those of our own Country . It might , indeed , be of ill ...
... agreeable Mixture of Garden and Forest , which repre- sent every where an artificial Rudeness , much more charming than that Neatness and Elegancy which we meet with in those of our own Country . It might , indeed , be of ill ...
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A. D. Lindsay Acquaintance Action ADDISON admired Aeneas Aeneid agreeable Angels appear Author Beauty Behaviour behold Callisthenes Character Chearfulness Cicero Circumstances Company consider Conversation Country Creature Delight desire Discourse Eastcourt Eclogues endeavour Entertainment Eyes Fancy Father Favour Fortune Friend Gentleman Georgics give Hand happy Heart Heaven Homer Honour Horace humble Servant Humour Iliad Imagination J. G. Lockhart Jupiter kind Lady Learning Letter live look Looking-Glass Love Mankind Manner Margaret Clark Milton Mind Modesty Mohocks Morality Motto Nature never Night Number obliged observed Occasion Ovid Paper Paradise Paradise Lost particular Passage Passion Paul Lorrain Person Place pleased Pleasure Poem Poet Poetry present Publick Reader Reason received Satyr shew Sight Sir ROGER Soul SPECTATOR Spirit STEELE Subject surprized Tatler tell thee thing thou thought tion told Town Virgil Virtue whole Woman Words World Writing Yard Land young