The Spectator ...John Sharpe, 1803 |
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Сторінка 87
... received as such to this day , That nothing is capable of being well set to music , that is not nonsense . ' This maxim was no sooner received , but we imme- diately fell to translating the Italian operas ; and as there was no great ...
... received as such to this day , That nothing is capable of being well set to music , that is not nonsense . ' This maxim was no sooner received , but we imme- diately fell to translating the Italian operas ; and as there was no great ...
Сторінка 159
... received such language with that ingenuous and pleasing mirth , which is natural to a woman without design . He still sighed in vain for Lætitia , but found certain relief in the agreeable con- versation of Daphne . At length , heartily ...
... received such language with that ingenuous and pleasing mirth , which is natural to a woman without design . He still sighed in vain for Lætitia , but found certain relief in the agreeable con- versation of Daphne . At length , heartily ...
Сторінка 351
... received , as one might have expected from a warrior of her sex , considers only ( like the hero of whom we are now speaking ) how the battle should be continued after her death : Tum sic expirans Accam ex æqualibus unam Alloquitur ...
... received , as one might have expected from a warrior of her sex , considers only ( like the hero of whom we are now speaking ) how the battle should be continued after her death : Tum sic expirans Accam ex æqualibus unam Alloquitur ...
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acquaint acrostics ADDISON admiration Æneid agreeable anagrams ancient appear APRIL 13 April 26 Aristotle assembly audience beautiful behaviour called character Cicero club coffee-house conversation discourse dress DRYDEN Earl Douglas endeavour English entertainment eyes false favour genius gentleman give hand heard heart hero honour Hudibras humble servant humour Italian John Sharpe kind king lady laugh learned letter likewise lion live look lover manner March 15 means mind nature never night observed occasion opera OVID paper passion person Pharamond Pict piece play pleased pleasure poem poet Porus present prince reader reason rhymes ROSCOMMON scenes sense shew sion speak Spectator stage STEELE talk tell thing thou thought tion told town tragedy turn verse VIRG Virgil virtue whig whole woman women words writing young