The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Volumen4G. Bell, 1882 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 85
Página 35
... live in these bodies is to live in this world ; to live out of them , is to remove into the next : for while our souls are confined to these bodies , and can look only through these material casements , nothing but what is material can ...
... live in these bodies is to live in this world ; to live out of them , is to remove into the next : for while our souls are confined to these bodies , and can look only through these material casements , nothing but what is material can ...
Página 51
... live and die upon it . I am every day abroad among my acres , and can scarce forbear filling my letter with breezes , shades , flowers , meadows , and purling streams . The simplicity of manners , which I have heard you so often speak ...
... live and die upon it . I am every day abroad among my acres , and can scarce forbear filling my letter with breezes , shades , flowers , meadows , and purling streams . The simplicity of manners , which I have heard you so often speak ...
Página 118
... live in a kind of splendid poverty , and are perpetually wanting , because , instead of acquiescing in the solid pleasures of life , they endeavour to outvie one another in shadows and appearances . Men of sense have at all times beheld ...
... live in a kind of splendid poverty , and are perpetually wanting , because , instead of acquiescing in the solid pleasures of life , they endeavour to outvie one another in shadows and appearances . Men of sense have at all times beheld ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
acquainted Æsop agreeable ants appeared beauty body called club consider conversation Covent Garden creatures daughter death discourse discover Divine duke of Anjou endeavour entertained eternity faculties female forbear French gentleman give greatest hand happiness head hear heart Helim Hilpa honour human humour husband infinite Ironside Julius Cæsar kind king ladies late learned letter lion live look Lucretius manner marriage mattadores matter means mention mind Mishpach Momus nation nature Nestor never obliged observed occasion ourselves Ovid paper particular perfection person pleased pleasure Plutarch poet present reader reason religion Rhadamanthus Roman triumph says servant Shalum short soul Spanish monarchy speak species Spectator Statius Tatler tell thee thou thought tion Tirzah tural VIRG virtue Whig whole woman women words writing young Zilpah