The Spectator, Zväzok 2C. Whittingham Dean Str. ... 1803., 1803 |
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Výsledky 1 - 5 z 60.
Strana
... speak a panegyric . But , MY LORD , your character will be re- corded in the page of History with far greater justice than this address can pretend to ; and our posterity , in their political , commercial , and literary relations , must ...
... speak a panegyric . But , MY LORD , your character will be re- corded in the page of History with far greater justice than this address can pretend to ; and our posterity , in their political , commercial , and literary relations , must ...
Strana
... speak a panegyric . But , MY LORD , your character will be re- corded in the page of History with far greater justice than this address can pretend to ; and our posterity , in their political , commercial , and literary relations , must ...
... speak a panegyric . But , MY LORD , your character will be re- corded in the page of History with far greater justice than this address can pretend to ; and our posterity , in their political , commercial , and literary relations , must ...
Strana 9
... speaking , in debt : and many families have put it into a kind of method of being so from generation to generation . The father mortgages when his son is very young : and the boy is to marry , as soon as he is at age , to redeem it and ...
... speaking , in debt : and many families have put it into a kind of method of being so from generation to generation . The father mortgages when his son is very young : and the boy is to marry , as soon as he is at age , to redeem it and ...
Strana 17
... speak it at all . " Pharamond commanded Eucrate to let him enter ; he did so , and the gentleman ap- proached the ... speaking to your friend . If the circumstances of your distress will admit of it , you shall find me so . To whom the ...
... speak it at all . " Pharamond commanded Eucrate to let him enter ; he did so , and the gentleman ap- proached the ... speaking to your friend . If the circumstances of your distress will admit of it , you shall find me so . To whom the ...
Strana 21
... exquisite pleasure . My reader will think I am not serious , when I ac- quaint him that the piece I am going to speak of , was the old ballad of the two children in the wood ' , which is one of the darling songs 85 . 21 SPECTATOR .
... exquisite pleasure . My reader will think I am not serious , when I ac- quaint him that the piece I am going to speak of , was the old ballad of the two children in the wood ' , which is one of the darling songs 85 . 21 SPECTATOR .
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Časté výrazy a frázy
acquainted ADDISON admirers agreeable appear beauty behaviour body character coffee-house Constantia conversation creature daugh discourse dress DRYDEN endeavour entertain Epig Eucrate Eudoxus eyes fair sex familiar spirit father favour fortune friend Sir Roger genius gentleman give Glaphyra Great-Britain happy hear heard heart honest honour human humble servant humour impertinent John Sharpe kind knight lady Laertes learned letter live look lover mankind manner marriage master mind nature neral never obliged observe occasion ordinary paper particular pass passion person Pharamond Pindar Plato Platonic love pleased pleasure present reader reason ribaldry sense shew sorrow soul speak SPECTATOR STEELE tell temper thee Theodosius thing thou thought tion told Tom Short town VIRG virtue whig whole woman women words write young youth