The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Volumen2G. Bell, 1881 |
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Página 149
... common people , breaks out in noise and show , and finds its reward , not from any inward pleasure that attends it , but from the praises and approbations which it receives from men . Of this shallow species there is not a more ...
... common people , breaks out in noise and show , and finds its reward , not from any inward pleasure that attends it , but from the praises and approbations which it receives from men . Of this shallow species there is not a more ...
Página 305
... common discourse , though we do not attend to it , and in such a due medium between rhyme and prose , that it seems wonderfully adapted to tra- gedy . I am therefore very much offended when I see a play in rhyme ; which is as absurd in ...
... common discourse , though we do not attend to it , and in such a due medium between rhyme and prose , that it seems wonderfully adapted to tra- gedy . I am therefore very much offended when I see a play in rhyme ; which is as absurd in ...
Página 374
... common sense , who would nei- ther relish nor comprehend an epigram of Martial , or a poem of Cowley : so , on the contrary , an ordinary song or ballad , that is the delight of the common people , cannot fail to please all such readers ...
... common sense , who would nei- ther relish nor comprehend an epigram of Martial , or a poem of Cowley : so , on the contrary , an ordinary song or ballad , that is the delight of the common people , cannot fail to please all such readers ...
Contenido
Dramatic News and Criticism | 20 |
Inventory of the Playhouse | 42 |
Miss Jennys MarriageChoice of Matches in | 75 |
Otras 98 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
acquainted acrostics admire Æneid agreeable appear Aristotle audience beautiful behaviour Bickerstaffe body Cicero club colours conversation court COVENT GARDEN creatures death delight discourse dress Edition endeavour English entertainment figure genius gentleman GEORGE BELL give hand hath head hear heard heart honour Hudibras humour Isaac Bickerstaffe Italian Julius Cæsar kind King lady learned letter likewise lion live look mankind manner means mind Muscovy nation nature never observed occasion opera OVID paper particular passed passion person piece pleased pleasure poem poet present proper racters reader reason ridicule Roman Censors says sense short Sir Richard Steele Sir Roger soul talk Telemachus tell temper thou thought tion told tragedy Translated turned verses VIRG Virgil virtue vols walk Whig whole woman women words writing young