The Spectator, Volume 5William Durell and Company, 1810 - English essays |
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Page 67
... head which we generally call the outside . This observation is so very notorious , that when in ordinary discourse we say a man has a fine head , a long head , or a good head , we express ourselves metaphorically , and speak in relation ...
... head which we generally call the outside . This observation is so very notorious , that when in ordinary discourse we say a man has a fine head , a long head , or a good head , we express ourselves metaphorically , and speak in relation ...
Page 69
... head which we generally call the outside . This observation is so very notorious , that when in ordinary discourse we say a man has a fine head , a long head , or a good head , we express ourselves metaphorically , and speak in relation ...
... head which we generally call the outside . This observation is so very notorious , that when in ordinary discourse we say a man has a fine head , a long head , or a good head , we express ourselves metaphorically , and speak in relation ...
Page 69
... head which we generally call the outside . This observation is so very notorious , that when in ordinary discourse we say a man has a fine head , a long head , or a good head , we express ourselves metaphorically , and speak in relation ...
... head which we generally call the outside . This observation is so very notorious , that when in ordinary discourse we say a man has a fine head , a long head , or a good head , we express ourselves metaphorically , and speak in relation ...
Contents
VOL V | 25 |
LETTER from a Coquette to a new mar | 254 |
Letters from an old Bachelorfrom Lovers | 260 |
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above-mentioned acquainted action admirer Æneid agreeable appear Aristotle beauty Beelzebub behaviour Bromius character CHARLES DIEUPART charms Christopher Clavius circumstances colour Cottius critic desire dress Enville epic poem eyes fable fame father faults favour February 18 fortune genius give greatest happy head heart heaven hell holy orders Homer honour hood hope humble servant humour husband Iliad infernal Julius Cæsar kind ladies learning letter light live look MADAM mankind manner marriage ment Milton mind mistress Moloch nature ness never obliged observed occasion Ovid paper Paradise Lost particular passage passion person pleased pleasure poem poet pray present proper racters reader reason ridicule ROSCOMMON sentiments shew Sir Roger speak SPECTATOR spirit taste tell Thammuz thing thought tion ture turn verse Virgil virtue whole woman words young