The Spectator, Svazek 3J.M. Dent & Company, 1912 |
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Strana 473
Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele George Gregory Smith. point the paper is a reprint , with some alterations , of the con- cluding portion of the second chapter of Steele's early work The Christian Hero . 357. PAGE 115. Motto . Virgil ...
Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele George Gregory Smith. point the paper is a reprint , with some alterations , of the con- cluding portion of the second chapter of Steele's early work The Christian Hero . 357. PAGE 115. Motto . Virgil ...
Strana 480
... Steele evidently liked these lines much , and found solace in quoting them in his ' solitude , ' for which , says Nichols , ' there were too many pecuniary reasons ' ( Steele's Epistolary Correspon- dence , i . 236 ) . " PAGE 247. Her ...
... Steele evidently liked these lines much , and found solace in quoting them in his ' solitude , ' for which , says Nichols , ' there were too many pecuniary reasons ' ( Steele's Epistolary Correspon- dence , i . 236 ) . " PAGE 247. Her ...
Strana 487
Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele George Gregory Smith. PAGE 371. Steele has here deleted the greater portion of the advertisement of this quack , which appears in extenso in A. ' Gandice ' ( for ' jaundice ' ) is an orthographic ...
Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele George Gregory Smith. PAGE 371. Steele has here deleted the greater portion of the advertisement of this quack , which appears in extenso in A. ' Gandice ' ( for ' jaundice ' ) is an orthographic ...
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Account Action ADDISON Advantage affected agreeable appear Author Beauty believe Body Book carry Character Circumstances Company consider Conversation Country Death Delight described Design desire Discourse excellent Eyes Father Figure Fortune Friend give given greater Hand happy Head hear Heart Honour hope human humble Ideas Imagination keep kind Lady lately Learning Letter Light live look Love Manner Matter mean meet Mind Morality Motto Name Nature never Night Objects obliged observed Occasion PAGE particular pass Passage Passion Person Place Play pleased Pleasure Poet present proper Publick raise Reader Reason received Reflections represented seems Sense Servant shew short Sight Soul speak SPECTATOR Spirit STEELE Subject taken tell thing thought told took Town turn Virtue whole Woman World Writing young