The Spectator, Volume 5Alexander Chalmers E. Sargeant, M. & W. Ward, Munroe, Francis & Parker, and Edward Cotton, Boston, 1810 - English essays |
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Page 108
... women ; but re- gard is to be had to their circumstances when they feil , to the uneasy perplexity under which they lived under senseless and severe parents , to the impor- tunity of poverty , to the violence of a passion in its ...
... women ; but re- gard is to be had to their circumstances when they feil , to the uneasy perplexity under which they lived under senseless and severe parents , to the impor- tunity of poverty , to the violence of a passion in its ...
Page 176
... woman to whom he addresses , and dreads nothing so much as her consent . His heart can flutter by the force of imagination , but cannot fix from the force of judgment . It is not uncommon for the parents of young women of moderate ...
... woman to whom he addresses , and dreads nothing so much as her consent . His heart can flutter by the force of imagination , but cannot fix from the force of judgment . It is not uncommon for the parents of young women of moderate ...
Page 179
... woman to whom he addresses , and dreads nothing so much as her consent . His heart can flutter by the force of imagination , but cannot fix from the force of judgment . It is not uncommon for the parents of young women of moderate ...
... woman to whom he addresses , and dreads nothing so much as her consent . His heart can flutter by the force of imagination , but cannot fix from the force of judgment . It is not uncommon for the parents of young women of moderate ...
Contents
VOL V | 25 |
LETTER from a Coquette to a new mar | 254 |
Letters from an old Bachelorfrom Lovers | 260 |
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