AddisonHarper, 1902 - 182 pagina's |
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Pagina 16
... speak to one another civilly ; hate one another heartily ; and , because it is vulgar to lie and soak together , we have each of us our several settle - beds . ' " That of ' soaking together ' is as good as if Dorimant had spoken it ...
... speak to one another civilly ; hate one another heartily ; and , because it is vulgar to lie and soak together , we have each of us our several settle - beds . ' " That of ' soaking together ' is as good as if Dorimant had spoken it ...
Pagina 133
... speak of me in a manner which nothing but the real respect I have for you can deserve . May I hope that some late malevolences have lost their effect ? ... As to what you have said of me I shall never be- lieve that the author of Cato ...
... speak of me in a manner which nothing but the real respect I have for you can deserve . May I hope that some late malevolences have lost their effect ? ... As to what you have said of me I shall never be- lieve that the author of Cato ...
Pagina 179
... speaking to it either from an inferior or su- perior position . The essayists had taken as their model Montaigne , and their style is therefore stamped , so to speak , with the character of soliloquy ; the preachers , who per- haps did ...
... speaking to it either from an inferior or su- perior position . The essayists had taken as their model Montaigne , and their style is therefore stamped , so to speak , with the character of soliloquy ; the preachers , who per- haps did ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
acquaintance acted Addi Addison admirable afterwards Ambrose Philips appear audience Cato character Charles II Club coffee-houses Countess of Warwick Court criticism Dennis described doubt drama Dryden Dunciad endeavour England English Essay fashion favour feeling fortunes French genius gentleman Halifax honour humour Ibid Iliad imagination Jacob Tonson kind King Kit-Kat Club Latin letter lion literary literature live look Lord Lord Halifax Lord Warwick manners Marlborough ment Milston mind moral nation nature never Ovid Oxford paper party period person play pleasure poem poet poetry political Pope Pope's praise principles published Puritan Queen reader reason Roger de Coverley satire says scarcely scenes seems sense sentiment Sir Roger society Spectator Spence Spence's Anecdotes spirit stage Steele Steele's style Swift Syphax taste Tatler tator thought Tickell Tickell's tion Tonson Tory tragedy translation verses virtue Whig words writes written wrote