The Spectator, Band 3J. Sharpe, 1808 |
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Seite 3
ference ; a fond one raises his suspicions , and looks too much like dissimulation and artifice . If the person he loves be chearful , her thoughts must be employed on another ; and if sad , she is certainly thinking on himself . In ...
ference ; a fond one raises his suspicions , and looks too much like dissimulation and artifice . If the person he loves be chearful , her thoughts must be employed on another ; and if sad , she is certainly thinking on himself . In ...
Seite 4
... looks like a jest upon their persons . They grow suspicious on their first looking in a glass , and are stung with jealousy at the sight of a wrinkle . A handsome fellow immediately alarms them , and every thing that looks young , or ...
... looks like a jest upon their persons . They grow suspicious on their first looking in a glass , and are stung with jealousy at the sight of a wrinkle . A handsome fellow immediately alarms them , and every thing that looks young , or ...
Seite 5
... look , and find out a design in a smile ; they give new senses and significations to words and actions ; and are ever tormenting themselves with fancies of their own raising . They generally act in a disguise them- selves , and ...
... look , and find out a design in a smile ; they give new senses and significations to words and actions ; and are ever tormenting themselves with fancies of their own raising . They generally act in a disguise them- selves , and ...
Seite 14
the height of youth and amorous inclinations , he would look upon a coquette with the same con- tempt , or indifference , as he would upon a coxcomb . The wanton carriage in a woman , would disappoint her of the admiration which she ...
the height of youth and amorous inclinations , he would look upon a coquette with the same con- tempt , or indifference , as he would upon a coxcomb . The wanton carriage in a woman , would disappoint her of the admiration which she ...
Seite 15
... look to it ; so in friend- ship , he is the man in danger who is most apt to be- lieve . He is the more likely to suffer in the com- merce , who begins with the obligation of being the more ready to enter into it . 6 But those men only ...
... look to it ; so in friend- ship , he is the man in danger who is most apt to be- lieve . He is the more likely to suffer in the com- merce , who begins with the obligation of being the more ready to enter into it . 6 But those men only ...
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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