The Spectator, Volume 8William Durell and Company, 1810 - English literature |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 64
Page 12
... Letter - box . -Ego Apis Matinæ More modoque , Grata carpentis thyma per laborem Plurimum- -My tim'rous Muse ... letters have in them reflections . which will seem of importance both to the learned world and to domestic life . There is ...
... Letter - box . -Ego Apis Matinæ More modoque , Grata carpentis thyma per laborem Plurimum- -My tim'rous Muse ... letters have in them reflections . which will seem of importance both to the learned world and to domestic life . There is ...
Page 20
... letter from an eminent citizen , who has failed , to one who was intimate with him in his better fortune , and able by his countenance to retrieve his lost condition . " SIR , " It is in vain to multiply words and make apologies for ...
... letter from an eminent citizen , who has failed , to one who was intimate with him in his better fortune , and able by his countenance to retrieve his lost condition . " SIR , " It is in vain to multiply words and make apologies for ...
Page 21
... letter , in which I broached my project of a newspa- per , encourages me to lay before you two or three more ; for you must know , Sir , that we look upon you to be the Lowndes ( a ) of the learned world , and can- not think any scheme ...
... letter , in which I broached my project of a newspa- per , encourages me to lay before you two or three more ; for you must know , Sir , that we look upon you to be the Lowndes ( a ) of the learned world , and can- not think any scheme ...
Page 23
... letter , in which I broached my project of a newspa- per , encourages me to lay before you two or three more ; for you must know , Sir , that we look upon you to be the Lowndes ( a ) of the learned world , and can- not think any scheme ...
... letter , in which I broached my project of a newspa- per , encourages me to lay before you two or three more ; for you must know , Sir , that we look upon you to be the Lowndes ( a ) of the learned world , and can- not think any scheme ...
Page 41
... letters . It is no small satisfaction to have given occasion to in- genious men to employ their thoughts upon sacred . subjects from the approbation of such pieces of poetry VOL . VIII . 5 as they have seen in my Saturdays ' papers . No ...
... letters . It is no small satisfaction to have given occasion to in- genious men to employ their thoughts upon sacred . subjects from the approbation of such pieces of poetry VOL . VIII . 5 as they have seen in my Saturdays ' papers . No ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ADDISON admiration agreeable appear Bacchius beauty body consider countenance Covent Garden creatures daugh dear delight desire discourse divine dreams dress Duke of Burgundy Eastcourt entertained excellent eyes faith folly fortune garden gentleman give gout grace greatest hand happy head hear heard heart honor hope humble servant humor husband imagination kind lady learning letter live look Manilius mankind manner marriage married matter merit mind modesty Mohair nature nerally never obliged observed occasion paper particular passion person Pharamond Pindar pleased pleasure Plutarch Plutus poor present proveditor racter reader reason Rechteren religion Rhynsault Samson Agonistes seems sense SEPTEMBER 18 sight sorrow soul SPECTATOR STEELE tell thing thou thought tion told town Tunbridge VIII VIRG Virgil virtue whilst whole wife woman women words write young