The Spectator |
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Strana 3
... dress or behaviour be introduced in the world, it will soon be found out and discarded : on the contrary, a habit or ceremony, though never so ridiculous, which has taken sanctuary in the Church, sticks in it for ever. A Gothic bishop ...
... dress or behaviour be introduced in the world, it will soon be found out and discarded : on the contrary, a habit or ceremony, though never so ridiculous, which has taken sanctuary in the Church, sticks in it for ever. A Gothic bishop ...
Strana 238
... dresses which hung there deserted by their first masters, and exposed to the purchase of the best bidder. At this ... dress, turned of fifty. He had at this time fifty pounds in ready money ; and in this habit, with this fortune, he ...
... dresses which hung there deserted by their first masters, and exposed to the purchase of the best bidder. At this ... dress, turned of fifty. He had at this time fifty pounds in ready money ; and in this habit, with this fortune, he ...
Strana 243
... dress. Nay, if I may believe my friend Will Honeycomb, there is a certain old coquette of his acquaintance who intends to appear very suddenly in a rainbow hood, like the Iris in Dryden's Virgil, not questioning but that among such a ...
... dress. Nay, if I may believe my friend Will Honeycomb, there is a certain old coquette of his acquaintance who intends to appear very suddenly in a rainbow hood, like the Iris in Dryden's Virgil, not questioning but that among such a ...
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acquaintance action addison admirable agreeable Alcibiades appear Aristotle beauty behaviour called character Charles Dieupart circumstances common consider Covent Garden creature critics desire discourse dress endeavour entertainment Enville esteem fame favour female folio issue fortune gentleman give Greek happiness head heart Homer honour hope Hudibras human humble Servant humour husband Iliad innocent John Hughes kind ladies leap letter live look lover Lover's Leap mankind manner marriage matter mentioned merit Milton mind nature never obliged observe occasion Ovid paper Paradise Lost particular pass passion perfection person pleased pleasure poem poet pray present proper reader reason reputation ridicule Roger de Coverley Sappho sentiments Socrates soul speak Spectator Spectator,—I spirit steele Tatler tell temper things Thomas Clayton thought tion town turn verse Virgil virtue whole wife woman women words write young