The Spectator |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 3 z 47.
Strana 41
... beauty , which immediately diffuses a secret satisfaction and complacency through the imagination , and gives a finishing to anything that is ! great or uncommon . The very first discovery of it strikes the mind with an inward joy , and ...
... beauty , which immediately diffuses a secret satisfaction and complacency through the imagination , and gives a finishing to anything that is ! great or uncommon . The very first discovery of it strikes the mind with an inward joy , and ...
Strana 42
... beauty that we find in the several products of art and nature which does not work in the imagination with that warmth and violence as the beauty that appears in our proper species , but is apt , however , to raise in us a secret 1 Most ...
... beauty that we find in the several products of art and nature which does not work in the imagination with that warmth and violence as the beauty that appears in our proper species , but is apt , however , to raise in us a secret 1 Most ...
Strana 43
... beauty the eye takes most delight in colours . We nowhere meet with a more glorious or pleasing show in nature than what appears in the heavens at the rising and setting of the sun , which is wholly made up of those different stains of ...
... beauty the eye takes most delight in colours . We nowhere meet with a more glorious or pleasing show in nature than what appears in the heavens at the rising and setting of the sun , which is wholly made up of those different stains of ...
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acquainted ADDISON admiration affected agreeable appear beauty behold Callisthenes Cicero colours consider conversation countenance Covent Garden creatures delight desire discourse divine dream dress endeavour entertainment Epig excellent eyes fancy favour fortune garden gentleman give greatest hand happy heart Hockley-in-the-Hole honour hope human humble Servant humour husband Iliad imagination James Miller kind lady letter live look mankind manner marriage matter mind modesty nature never objects obliged observed occasion OVID paper Paradise Lost particular pass passion person Pindar pleased pleasure Plutarch Plutus poet present reader reason received Rechteren reflection Roger de Coverley satisfaction seems Sempronia sense sight Sir Robert Viner soul Spectator SPECTATOR,-I STEELE taste Tatler tell things thou thought tion town TUNBRIDGE VIRG Virgil virtue whole woman women words writing young