The Spectator, Nide 8William Durell and Company, 1810 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 100
Sivu 2
... thing we already possess, and from whom we expect every thing we yet hope for. Most of the works of the Pagan poets were either direct hymns to their deities, or tended indirectly to the celebration of their respective attributes and ...
... thing we already possess, and from whom we expect every thing we yet hope for. Most of the works of the Pagan poets were either direct hymns to their deities, or tended indirectly to the celebration of their respective attributes and ...
Sivu 2
... thing we already possess , and from whom we expect every thing we yet hope for . Most of the works of the Pagan poets were either direct hymns to their deities , or tended indirectly to the celebration of their respective attributes and ...
... thing we already possess , and from whom we expect every thing we yet hope for . Most of the works of the Pagan poets were either direct hymns to their deities , or tended indirectly to the celebration of their respective attributes and ...
Sivu 9
... thing . The silk - worms are , it seems , indulged by the tradesmen ; for though they never buy , they are ever talking of new silks , laces , and ribbands , and serve the owners in getting them customers as their common dunners do in ...
... thing . The silk - worms are , it seems , indulged by the tradesmen ; for though they never buy , they are ever talking of new silks , laces , and ribbands , and serve the owners in getting them customers as their common dunners do in ...
Sivu 11
... to keep their minds open to gratification , and ready to receive it from any thing it meets with . This one circumstance will make every face you see give you the satisfaction you now take in beholding that No. 454 . 11 THE SPECTATOR .
... to keep their minds open to gratification , and ready to receive it from any thing it meets with . This one circumstance will make every face you see give you the satisfaction you now take in beholding that No. 454 . 11 THE SPECTATOR .
Sivu 15
... thing pleasant to us . I cannot deny but that I received above two - penny - worth of instruction from your pa- per , and in the general was very well pleased with it ; but I am , without a compliment , sincerely troubled that I cannot ...
... thing pleasant to us . I cannot deny but that I received above two - penny - worth of instruction from your pa- per , and in the general was very well pleased with it ; but I am , without a compliment , sincerely troubled that I cannot ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
ADDISON admiration agreeable appear Bacchius beauty body consider countenance Covent Garden creatures daugh dear delight desire discourse divine dreams dress Duke of Burgundy Eastcourt entertained excellent eyes faith folly fortune garden gentleman give gout grace greatest hand happy head hear heard heart honor hope humble servant humor husband imagination kind lady learning letter live look Manilius mankind manner marriage married matter merit mind modesty Mohair nature nerally never obliged observed occasion paper particular passion person Pharamond Pindar pleased pleasure Plutarch Plutus poor present proveditor racter reader reason Rechteren religion Rhynsault Samson Agonistes seems sense SEPTEMBER 18 sight sorrow soul SPECTATOR STEELE tell thing thou thought tion told town Tunbridge VIII VIRG Virgil virtue whilst whole wife woman women words write young