The Spectator; in Miniature: Being a Collection of the Principal Religious, Moral, Humorous, Satyrical & Critical Essays Contained in that Celebrated Publication, Volumul 2W. Suttaby, 1808 |
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Pagina 79
... imagination , trace out the hidden springs of nature's operations , be able to keep pace with the heavenly bodies in the rapi dity of their career , be a spectator of the long chain of events in the natural and moral worlds , visit the ...
... imagination , trace out the hidden springs of nature's operations , be able to keep pace with the heavenly bodies in the rapi dity of their career , be a spectator of the long chain of events in the natural and moral worlds , visit the ...
Pagina 93
... imagination to conceive something uncommon , and , with the greatness of his thoughts , casts , as it were , a glory round the sentence . Uncertain and un- settled as he was , he seems fired with the contempla- tion of it . And nothing ...
... imagination to conceive something uncommon , and , with the greatness of his thoughts , casts , as it were , a glory round the sentence . Uncertain and un- settled as he was , he seems fired with the contempla- tion of it . And nothing ...
Pagina 277
... imagination . If he has made these lower regions of matter so inconceivably wide and magnificent for the habitation of mortal and perishable beings , how great may we suppose the courts of his house to be , where he makes his residence ...
... imagination . If he has made these lower regions of matter so inconceivably wide and magnificent for the habitation of mortal and perishable beings , how great may we suppose the courts of his house to be , where he makes his residence ...
Cuprins
VOLUME | i |
History of Inkle and Yarico | iii |
Life of Joseph Addison The Same | xx |
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Termeni și expresii frecvente
Acrostics ADDISON admired affect agreeable Anagrams animals appear April fools atheist Avarice beautiful behaviour Blanche of Castile body called character Cicero consider conversation court creatures death delight divine dreams dressed DRYDEN endeavour Eucrate excellent fancy Fidelio fortune genius gentleman George Etheridge give glory greatest hand happy heard heart Heaven Hesiod honour human humour ideas imagination infinite JOSEPH ADDISON kind king lady Lætitia laugh live look Lord mankind manner ment mind nature neral never observe occasion opinion OVID particular passion perfection person Pharamond Pict Pindar pleased pleasure poem poet praise present prince racter reader reason religion ROSCOMMON sense sight sion Sir Richard Baker soul speak Spectator spirits Tatler tell temper thing thou thought tion told truth tural turn VIRG virtue Whig whilst whole woman wonderful words writings young