The Spectator, Volume 6J. and R. Tonson and S. Draper, 1753 - English essays |
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Page 49
They keep the Audience awake , and fix their Attention to what is delivered to them , at the fame time that they fhew the Speaker is in earnest , and affected himself with what he fo paffionately recommends to others .
They keep the Audience awake , and fix their Attention to what is delivered to them , at the fame time that they fhew the Speaker is in earnest , and affected himself with what he fo paffionately recommends to others .
Page 79
... in proportion , he is affected with the Infide of a Gothic Cathedral tho ' it be five times larger than the other ; which can arise from nothing else but the Greatness of the Manner in the one , and the Meanness in the other .
... in proportion , he is affected with the Infide of a Gothic Cathedral tho ' it be five times larger than the other ; which can arise from nothing else but the Greatness of the Manner in the one , and the Meanness in the other .
Page 75
... and how the Imagination is filled with fomething Great and Amazing ; and , at the fame time , confider how little , in proportion , he is affected with the Infide of a Gothic Cathedral tho ' it be five times larger than the other ...
... and how the Imagination is filled with fomething Great and Amazing ; and , at the fame time , confider how little , in proportion , he is affected with the Infide of a Gothic Cathedral tho ' it be five times larger than the other ...
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