Joseph Addison, Volume 10Twayne Publishers, 1982 - 182 pagine |
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Pagina 52
... live more happy and contented among their rocks and snows , than others of the Italians do in the pleasantest vallies of the world . Nothing indeed can be a greater instance of the natural love that mankind has for liberty , and of ...
... live more happy and contented among their rocks and snows , than others of the Italians do in the pleasantest vallies of the world . Nothing indeed can be a greater instance of the natural love that mankind has for liberty , and of ...
Pagina 79
... live and a family to live with ; he is given a voice to speak with . As Addison begins to pay attention to the details of the character and his environment , the moral becomes implicit rather than explicit . The character himself ...
... live and a family to live with ; he is given a voice to speak with . As Addison begins to pay attention to the details of the character and his environment , the moral becomes implicit rather than explicit . The character himself ...
Pagina 110
... live out a full life . By accident or by the malice of spirits many plunge into the sea below . Both ends of the bridge — the origin and the end of human life- are covered with cloud , for no man sees whence he came or where he is going ...
... live out a full life . By accident or by the malice of spirits many plunge into the sea below . Both ends of the bridge — the origin and the end of human life- are covered with cloud , for no man sees whence he came or where he is going ...
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