The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Volumen4G. Bell, 1882 |
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Página 36
... thought that I have endeavoured to express in the following hymn , which I have composed dur ing this my sickness . I. WHEN rising from the bed of death , O'erwhelmed with guilt and fear , I see my Maker face to face , O how shall I ...
... thought that I have endeavoured to express in the following hymn , which I have composed dur ing this my sickness . I. WHEN rising from the bed of death , O'erwhelmed with guilt and fear , I see my Maker face to face , O how shall I ...
Página 45
... thought is beautiful which is not just , and no thought can be just which is not founded in truth , or at least in that which passes for such.2 In mock - heroic poems , the use of the heathen mythology is not only excusable but graceful ...
... thought is beautiful which is not just , and no thought can be just which is not founded in truth , or at least in that which passes for such.2 In mock - heroic poems , the use of the heathen mythology is not only excusable but graceful ...
Página 101
... thought was a new conceit , and had appropriated to his own use . ] The reader may , perhaps , think ( for the writer himself , in a care- less humour , appears to have done so ) that the copulative and connects the verbs thought and ...
... thought was a new conceit , and had appropriated to his own use . ] The reader may , perhaps , think ( for the writer himself , in a care- less humour , appears to have done so ) that the copulative and connects the verbs thought and ...
Contenido
THE SPECTATOR | xi |
Will Honeycombs Proposal of a Fair for Marriage | 22 |
FREEHOLDER | 26 |
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Términos y frases comunes
able acquainted agreeable ants appeared beauty body club consider conversation COVENT GARDEN creatures daughter death desire discourse discover Divine drachmas dreams endeavour entertained eternity fable faculties Fcap female Freeport gentleman GEORGE BELL give hand happy hear heart Helim Hilpa Honeycomb honour human humour husband infinite Ironside Julius Cæsar kind king ladies late learned letter lion live look Lucretius manner marriage matter means mention mind nation nature never observed occasion ourselves OVID paper particular perfection Persian empire person pleased pleasure Plutarch poet present reader reason religion Rhadamanthus says sentence servant Shalum short soul Spanish monarchy speak species Spectator Statius story Tatler tell thee things THOMAS HENRY DYER thou thought tion Tirzah turn VIRG Virgil virtue Whig whole woman women wonder word writing young