The Spectator |
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Strana 221
... modesty has , perhaps , betrayed both sexes into as many vices as the most abandoned impudence , and is the more ... modesty , and nothing is more contemptible than the false . The one guards virtue , the other betrays it . True modesty ...
... modesty has , perhaps , betrayed both sexes into as many vices as the most abandoned impudence , and is the more ... modesty , and nothing is more contemptible than the false . The one guards virtue , the other betrays it . True modesty ...
Strana 222
... modesty complies with everything , and is only fearful of doing what may look singular in the company where he is engaged . He falls in with the torrent , and lets himself go to every action or discourse , however unjustifiable in ...
... modesty complies with everything , and is only fearful of doing what may look singular in the company where he is engaged . He falls in with the torrent , and lets himself go to every action or discourse , however unjustifiable in ...
Strana 325
... modesty when he says : In the modesty of fearful duty I read as much as from the rattling tongue Of fancy and audacious eloquence 2 Now since these authors have professed themselves for the modest man , even in the utmost confusions of ...
... modesty when he says : In the modesty of fearful duty I read as much as from the rattling tongue Of fancy and audacious eloquence 2 Now since these authors have professed themselves for the modest man , even in the utmost confusions of ...
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acquainted ADDISON admiration affected agreeable appear beauty behold Callisthenes Cicero colours consider conversation countenance Covent Garden creatures delight desire discourse divine dream dress endeavour entertainment Epig excellent eyes fancy favour fortune garden gentleman give greatest hand happy heart Hockley-in-the-Hole honour hope human humble Servant humour husband Iliad imagination James Miller kind lady letter live look mankind manner marriage matter mind modesty nature never objects obliged observed occasion OVID paper Paradise Lost particular pass passion person Pindar pleased pleasure Plutarch Plutus poet present reader reason received Rechteren reflection Roger de Coverley satisfaction seems Sempronia sense sight Sir Robert Viner soul Spectator SPECTATOR,-I STEELE taste Tatler tell things thou thought tion town TUNBRIDGE VIRG Virgil virtue whole woman women words writing young