The Spectator, 第 6 巻Tonson, 1739 |
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8 ページ
... given me an hundred Pounds , rather than I should have publish'd that Paper , for that his Miftrefs , who had pro- mifed to explain herself to him about the Beginning of May , upon reading that Discourse told him that he would give him ...
... given me an hundred Pounds , rather than I should have publish'd that Paper , for that his Miftrefs , who had pro- mifed to explain herself to him about the Beginning of May , upon reading that Discourse told him that he would give him ...
26 ページ
... given them Warning against agreeable Company of the other Sex , ex- cept they are well acquainted with their Characters . Wo- men may difguife it if they think fit , and the more to do it , they may be angry at me for faying it ; but I ...
... given them Warning against agreeable Company of the other Sex , ex- cept they are well acquainted with their Characters . Wo- men may difguife it if they think fit , and the more to do it , they may be angry at me for faying it ; but I ...
27 ページ
... given to him for whom fhe has neither Love nor Friendship . For what fhould a poor Creature do that has loft all her Friends ? There's Marinet the Agreeable , has , to my Knowledge , had a Friendship for Lord Wel ford , which had like ...
... given to him for whom fhe has neither Love nor Friendship . For what fhould a poor Creature do that has loft all her Friends ? There's Marinet the Agreeable , has , to my Knowledge , had a Friendship for Lord Wel ford , which had like ...
46 ページ
... given us ; but fince he has not , a much inferior Hand has ventured to fend you this . It is a Cuftom with the Northern Lovers to divert < themselves with a Song , whilft they journey through the fenny Moors to pay a Vifit to their ...
... given us ; but fince he has not , a much inferior Hand has ventured to fend you this . It is a Cuftom with the Northern Lovers to divert < themselves with a Song , whilft they journey through the fenny Moors to pay a Vifit to their ...
48 ページ
... given any Cha- racter of the English Nation , whatever Vices they afcribe to it , allow in general , that the People are naturally Modeft . It proceeds perhaps from this our Na- tional Virtue , that our Orators are obferved to make use ...
... given any Cha- racter of the English Nation , whatever Vices they afcribe to it , allow in general , that the People are naturally Modeft . It proceeds perhaps from this our Na- tional Virtue , that our Orators are obferved to make use ...
多く使われている語句
againſt agreeable alfo appear arife Beauty becauſe Bufinefs caft Caufe Company confider Confideration Converfation Courfe Cuftom defcribed Defcription Defign defire delight Difcourfe dreffed eafy Entertainment Eyes faid fame Fancy fecret feems feen felf felves fent ferve feveral fhall fhew fhort fhould fince firft fome fomething fometimes fpeak Friend ftill fuch fufficient fure give good-natur'd greateſt Happineſs Heart Hiftory himſelf humble Servant Humour ibid Imagination Inftances juft Juftice kind Lady laft lefs likewife loft look Love manner Mind moft moſt muft muſt Nature neral never Number obferved Objects Occafion Ovid Paffions pafs Paper Perfon pleafant pleafing Pleafure pleaſe prefent Profpect Publick racter raife Reader Reafon Reflexion Refpect reft reprefented rife Sempronia Senfe ſhe Sight Soul SPECTATOR thefe themfelves ther theſe thing thofe thoſe thought tion uſed Virtue whofe whole Words World Writing
人気のある引用
264 ページ - There is neither speech nor language : but their voices are heard among them. Their sound is gone out into all lands : and their words into the ends of the world.
290 ページ - O dark, dark, dark, amid the blaze of noon, Irrecoverably dark, total eclipse Without all hope of day! O first created beam, and thou great Word, Let there be light, and light was over all; Why am I thus bereaved thy prime decree?
90 ページ - ... because the imagination can fancy to itself things more great, strange, or beautiful, than the eye ever saw, and is still sensible of some defect in what it has seen ; on this account, it is the part of a poet to humour the imagination in our own notions, by mending and perfecting nature where he describes a reality, and by adding greater beauties than are put together in nature, where he describes a fiction.
46 ページ - Turn umbratiles sunt, ut putent in turbido esse quicquid in luce est' ('Some men, like pictures, are fitter for a corner than a full light') ; and I believe such as have a natural bent to solitude are like waters which may be forced into fountains, and exalted to a great height, may make a much nobler figure, and a much louder noise, but after all run more smoothly, equally, and plentifully, in their own natural course upon the ground.
216 ページ - If gratitude is due from man to man, how much more from man to his Maker ? The...
15 ページ - Try me, good king : but let me have a lawful trial, and let not my sworn enemies sit as my accusers and judges ; yea, let me receive an open trial, for my truth shall fear no open shame...
14 ページ - I rightly conceived your meaning ; and if, as you say, confessing a truth indeed may procure my safety, I shall with all willingness and duty, perform your command. " But let not your grace ever imagine that your poor wife will ever be brought to acknowledge a fault, where not so much as a thought thereof preceded.
266 ページ - AM a widower with but one daughter : she was by nature much inclined to be a romp; and I had no way of educating her, but commanding a young woman, whom I entertained to take care of her, to be very watchful in her care and attendance about her. I am a man of business, and obliged to be much abroad. The neighbours have told me, that in my absence our maid has let in the spruce servants in the neighbourhood to junketings, while my girl played and romped even in the street.
86 ページ - ... in former ages. Such advantages as these help to open a man's thoughts, and to enlarge his imagination, and will therefore have their influence on all kinds of writing, if the author knows how to make right use of them.
71 ページ - ... in the production of a monster (the result of any unnatural mixture,) the breed is incapable of propagating its likeness, and of founding a new order of creatures; so that, unless all animals were allured by the beauty of their own species, generation would be at an end, and the earth unpeopled.