The Spectator, Zväzok 1Dent, 1926 An amusing and informative record of English morals and manners in the early-eighteenth century. |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 52.
Strana viii
... verses in the quotations in the text have been corrected ; but the fashion of contemporary scholarship has been preserved , for it would have been an historical impropriety to supplant the worthy Tonson by the more learned Teubner . The ...
... verses in the quotations in the text have been corrected ; but the fashion of contemporary scholarship has been preserved , for it would have been an historical impropriety to supplant the worthy Tonson by the more learned Teubner . The ...
Strana ix
... Verses , such as Pope's Messiah or Addison's ' Pieces of Divine Poetry , ' which were printed for the first time in the Spectator , are given in the ordinary type of the Papers ; but the quoted passages have been set up in type of a ...
... Verses , such as Pope's Messiah or Addison's ' Pieces of Divine Poetry , ' which were printed for the first time in the Spectator , are given in the ordinary type of the Papers ; but the quoted passages have been set up in type of a ...
Strana 22
... more than the Modern Italians pretend to do , And as for the Poet himself , from whom the Dreams of this Opera are taken , I must entirely agree with Monsieur Boileau , that S 1 that one verse in Virgil is worth all 22 THE SPECTATOR.
... more than the Modern Italians pretend to do , And as for the Poet himself , from whom the Dreams of this Opera are taken , I must entirely agree with Monsieur Boileau , that S 1 that one verse in Virgil is worth all 22 THE SPECTATOR.
Strana 23
Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele. S 1 that one verse in Virgil is worth all the Clincant or No. 5 . Tinsel of Tasso , But to return to the Sparrows ; there have been so many Flights of them let loose in this Opera , that it is feared ...
Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele. S 1 that one verse in Virgil is worth all the Clincant or No. 5 . Tinsel of Tasso , But to return to the Sparrows ; there have been so many Flights of them let loose in this Opera , that it is feared ...
Strana 33
... Verses out of his poem to Vandike . The heedless Lover does not know Whose Eyes they are that wound him so , But , confounded with thy Art , Enquires her Name that has his Heart . I pronounced these Words with such a languishing Air ...
... Verses out of his poem to Vandike . The heedless Lover does not know Whose Eyes they are that wound him so , But , confounded with thy Art , Enquires her Name that has his Heart . I pronounced these Words with such a languishing Air ...
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