The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Volumen4 |
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Página ii
And here , I think , I shall stick ; for such useful sense , in so charming words , I find not elsewhere . His taste is so pure , and his Virgilian prose ( as Dr. Young styles it ) so exquisite , that I have but now found out , at the ...
And here , I think , I shall stick ; for such useful sense , in so charming words , I find not elsewhere . His taste is so pure , and his Virgilian prose ( as Dr. Young styles it ) so exquisite , that I have but now found out , at the ...
Página viii
Proper Sense and Notion of Honour . 308 162. Humour of a Blunt Squire — Complaisance — Story of Schacabac 312 163. Letter from an Insulted Chaplain – Poem by Si Thomas More 315 165. Miseries of Folly and Vice at the Head of a Family 319 ...
Proper Sense and Notion of Honour . 308 162. Humour of a Blunt Squire — Complaisance — Story of Schacabac 312 163. Letter from an Insulted Chaplain – Poem by Si Thomas More 315 165. Miseries of Folly and Vice at the Head of a Family 319 ...
Página 1
When the organs of sense want their due repose and necessary reparations , and the body is no longer able to keep pace with that spiritual substance to which it is united , the soul exerts herself in her several faculties ...
When the organs of sense want their due repose and necessary reparations , and the body is no longer able to keep pace with that spiritual substance to which it is united , the soul exerts herself in her several faculties ...
Página 2
... author gives an account of himself in his dreaming and his waking thoughts . are somewhat more than ourselves in our sleeps , and the slumber of the body seems to be but the waking of the soul . It is the ligation of sense , but the ...
... author gives an account of himself in his dreaming and his waking thoughts . are somewhat more than ourselves in our sleeps , and the slumber of the body seems to be but the waking of the soul . It is the ligation of sense , but the ...
Página 5
But there is none of these my correspondents , who writes with a greater turn of good sense and elegance of expression , than the generous Philomedes , who advises me to value every Spectator at sixpence ...
But there is none of these my correspondents , who writes with a greater turn of good sense and elegance of expression , than the generous Philomedes , who advises me to value every Spectator at sixpence ...
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able acquainted appear beautiful believe body bring called character common consider consideration conversation creatures death desire discover enemies English face fall female figure forced French gave give given greater greatest hand happy head hear heart honour hope human immediately keep kind king ladies late laws learned letter lion live look manner matter means mention mind nature never obliged observed occasion particular party passed person pleased pleasure poet political present prince proper question raised reader reason received regard religion represented seems sense short side soul speak story taken talk tell things thou thought tion turn virtue whole woman women writing young