Fireside Studies, Band 1Chatto and Windus, 1876 |
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Seite 5
... politicians , as a man who had done nothing ; a bankrupt , in what Carlyle calls the bankrupt century , which committed suicide ; Steele saved him from that ; Addison will live among our educated people , as long possibly as Wal- pole ...
... politicians , as a man who had done nothing ; a bankrupt , in what Carlyle calls the bankrupt century , which committed suicide ; Steele saved him from that ; Addison will live among our educated people , as long possibly as Wal- pole ...
Seite 11
... political ruin it was rather hard of his enemies to rake up an old statute against him , but the St. Pancras Vestry are doing exactly the same in raking up an act of the godly Charles II . against Sunday traders : on all details we are ...
... political ruin it was rather hard of his enemies to rake up an old statute against him , but the St. Pancras Vestry are doing exactly the same in raking up an act of the godly Charles II . against Sunday traders : on all details we are ...
Seite 25
... political freedom . It was rather fortunate for Ensign Steele that when he found himself " awakened " there was not a Romish priest handy ; he was perfectly ready for one , and a great convert has been lost . Sensitive and we will not ...
... political freedom . It was rather fortunate for Ensign Steele that when he found himself " awakened " there was not a Romish priest handy ; he was perfectly ready for one , and a great convert has been lost . Sensitive and we will not ...
Seite 52
... political power : Addison showed the letter to Steele : Steele wrote to Swift , laughing at his claim of having saved him : Swift's reply is grinding and terrible . could be inexorably harsh , and was a master He of a certain kind of ...
... political power : Addison showed the letter to Steele : Steele wrote to Swift , laughing at his claim of having saved him : Swift's reply is grinding and terrible . could be inexorably harsh , and was a master He of a certain kind of ...
Seite 61
... of fresh peers by the sovereign for the purpose of carrying any political measure through the Upper House . Steele was furious at the measure , and published a paper called the " Plebeian THE FATHERS OF THE SPECTATOR . 61.
... of fresh peers by the sovereign for the purpose of carrying any political measure through the Upper House . Steele was furious at the measure , and published a paper called the " Plebeian THE FATHERS OF THE SPECTATOR . 61.
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Addison admirable afterwards Andrew Marvell Bartholomew Fair Ben Jonson better Bobadil borough Brainworm Budgell Burrell Cato certainly character Charles Charles II Church conscience court Cromwell Cuckfield death demyship Downright Drummond Duchess Duchess of Portsmouth Duke England English Erastian fact father friends gave gentle gentleman Giles Moore give hand Horsted Keynes husband John Coachman Jonson King Kitely Lady Steele Lancelot Addison Latin lived Lord Cutts Lord Macaulay married Marvell's Masque matter Milton mother nearly never Old Knowell once paper Parker parliament person play poem poet Pope pounds Prince probably quarrel Queen readers religion seems Sejanus servant Shakespeare shillings singular Sir Richard Steele Sir Roger speak Spectator splendid Steele's Sussex Swift tells things Tickell tion tolerable took verses Volpone Wellborn Whig wife Wimble Winestead woman write written wrote Young Knowell