The Spectator (Complete) |
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... hearts of men. His sympathies were with all England. Defoe and he, with eyes upon the future, were thetruest leaders ... heart Addison's friendship stoodforall homeblessings hehad missed. Thesister's playful grace,the brother's love,the ...
... hearts of men. His sympathies were with all England. Defoe and he, with eyes upon the future, were thetruest leaders ... heart Addison's friendship stoodforall homeblessings hehad missed. Thesister's playful grace,the brother's love,the ...
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... heart hastens to meet his friend. He lives in his surroundings, and, in friendly intercourse, fixes his whole thought on the worth of his companion. Never abating a jot of his ideal of a true and perfect life, or ceasing to uphold the ...
... heart hastens to meet his friend. He lives in his surroundings, and, in friendly intercourse, fixes his whole thought on the worth of his companion. Never abating a jot of his ideal of a true and perfect life, or ceasing to uphold the ...
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... heart was with the cause of the Revolution, and he owed also to the Ormonds a kind of family allegiance. What was more natural than that he should be among those young Oxford men who were tempted toenlist inthe Chancellor's own ...
... heart was with the cause of the Revolution, and he owed also to the Ormonds a kind of family allegiance. What was more natural than that he should be among those young Oxford men who were tempted toenlist inthe Chancellor's own ...
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... heart was with whathetookto be thepeople's cause. When Swift hadbeen writing to Addison thathe thought Steele'the vilestof mankind,' in writingof thistoSwift, Steele complained thatthe 'Examiner',—in which Swift hadabusy hand,—said ...
... heart was with whathetookto be thepeople's cause. When Swift hadbeen writing to Addison thathe thought Steele'the vilestof mankind,' in writingof thistoSwift, Steele complained thatthe 'Examiner',—in which Swift hadabusy hand,—said ...
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... heart was in the momentous issue. Both he and Addison hadit in mind while they were blending their calm playfulness with all the clamour of the press. The spirit inwhich these friends worked, youngPope must have felt;for after ...
... heart was in the momentous issue. Both he and Addison hadit in mind while they were blending their calm playfulness with all the clamour of the press. The spirit inwhich these friends worked, youngPope must have felt;for after ...
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Common terms and phrases
abovementioned Acquaintance Addison Admiration AEneid agreeable allthe andthe appear areso Aristotle atthe Beauty Behaviour bythe called Character Coffeehouse Conversation Country Creature Discourse endeavour English Entertainment Eyes Father Favour Footnote Fortune Friend gaveme Gentleman give happy Heart Honour Hudibras humble Servant Humour Ihave Iliad Imagination impertinent inhis inthe inthis isan Ishall itis kind Lady Letter live look Love Lover Man’s Mankind manner Manof Marriage Master Milton Mind Mistress Nature never Number obliged observed Occasion ofhis ofthe ofthis Opera Ovid Paper Paradise Lost particular Passion Person Pharamond Place pleased Pleasure Poem Poet present publick Reader Reason ridiculous Sappho Satyr Sense shew Sir ROGER Socrates speak SPECTATOR Steele Subject sucha Tatler Temper thathe thatI Theodosius thing thought tobe tosee totake tothe Town Verse Virg Virgil Virtue Whig whole witha withthe Woman Women Words World write young