The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Volume 4G. Bell, 1882 |
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Page 58
... passed in his mind ) as a near relation to the Persian glass - man . ” As for the ellipsis , it is very frequent , and natural in all languages ; the mind hastening to its main conclusion , without stopping to deduce ex- plicitly its ...
... passed in his mind ) as a near relation to the Persian glass - man . ” As for the ellipsis , it is very frequent , and natural in all languages ; the mind hastening to its main conclusion , without stopping to deduce ex- plicitly its ...
Page 299
... passed most of my last years in condemn- ing the follies of the times ; I was every day blaming the silly conduct of people about me , in order to deter those I conversed with from falling into the like errors and miscar- riages ...
... passed most of my last years in condemn- ing the follies of the times ; I was every day blaming the silly conduct of people about me , in order to deter those I conversed with from falling into the like errors and miscar- riages ...
Page 329
... passed through it . The band of negroes who were posted at a little distance from the gate , seeing two such beautiful apparitions , that showed themselves to advantage by the light of the full moon , and being ravished with the odour ...
... passed through it . The band of negroes who were posted at a little distance from the gate , seeing two such beautiful apparitions , that showed themselves to advantage by the light of the full moon , and being ravished with the odour ...
Contents
THE SPECTATOR | 1 |
On the Number Dispersion and Religion of | 13 |
FREEHOLDER PAGI | 26 |
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