The Spectator, Volume 3J. Sharpe, 1808 |
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Page 6
... tion of her husband rising towards her in proportion as his doubts and suspicions vanish ; for , as we have seen all along , there is so great a mixture of love and jealousy , as is well worth the separating . But this shall be the ...
... tion of her husband rising towards her in proportion as his doubts and suspicions vanish ; for , as we have seen all along , there is so great a mixture of love and jealousy , as is well worth the separating . But this shall be the ...
Page 8
... tion does not rise so high as he thinks it ought . If therefore his temper be grave or sullen , you must not be too much pleased with a jest , or transported with any thing that is gay and diverting . If his beauty be none of the best ...
... tion does not rise so high as he thinks it ought . If therefore his temper be grave or sullen , you must not be too much pleased with a jest , or transported with any thing that is gay and diverting . If his beauty be none of the best ...
Page 11
... so that after his return , when he flew to her with all the transports of joy and love , she re- ceived him coldly with sighs and tears , and all the 1 marks of indifference and aversion . This recep- tion so 171 . 11 . SPECTATOR .
... so that after his return , when he flew to her with all the transports of joy and love , she re- ceived him coldly with sighs and tears , and all the 1 marks of indifference and aversion . This recep- tion so 171 . 11 . SPECTATOR .
Page 12
marks of indifference and aversion . This recep- tion so stirred up his indignation , that he had cer- tainly slain her with his own hands , had not he fear- ed he himself should have become the greatest suf- ferer by it . It was not ...
marks of indifference and aversion . This recep- tion so stirred up his indignation , that he had cer- tainly slain her with his own hands , had not he fear- ed he himself should have become the greatest suf- ferer by it . It was not ...
Page 23
proach . For a man to be mistaken in the calcula- tion of his expence , in his ability to answer future demands , or to be impertinently sanguine in put- ting his credit to too great adventure , are all instances of as much infamy , as ...
proach . For a man to be mistaken in the calcula- tion of his expence , in his ability to answer future demands , or to be impertinently sanguine in put- ting his credit to too great adventure , are all instances of as much infamy , as ...
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Acarnania acquainted actions ADDISON admirable agreeable Alcibiades appear atheist beautiful behaviour Castilian character consider conversation creature daugh desire discourse endeavour entertainment esteem eyes father favour female fortune gentleman give happy heart Herod HESIOD honour Hudibras human humble servant humour husband Hyæna Iliad imagination innocence jealousy kind labour lady leap letter Leucate live look lover Lover's Leap man's mankind manner Mariamne matter means merit mind nature never nihil obliged observe occasion October 30 opinion ourselves OVID pain paper particular passion person Plato pleased pleasure Plutarch poet poor pray present pretend Pyrrhus racter reader reason religion renegado Salamander Sappho secret sense shew sion Socrates soul species SPECTATOR speculation spirit STEELE tell temper tender ther thing thought tion town turn VIRG virtue virtuous whole wife woman women word write young