The Works of the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Volume 5Vernor and Hood; John Walker; Cuthell and Martin; W.J. and J. Richardson; Longman and Rees; R. Lea; and J. and A. Arch. ; T. Maiden, printer, Sherbourn-Lane, 1804 |
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Page 8
... greater honours on Pindar's jockies , than on the poet himself . But by this time , I suppose , you have drawn up all your medallic peo- ple , and indeed they make a much more formidable body than I could have imagined . You have shown ...
... greater honours on Pindar's jockies , than on the poet himself . But by this time , I suppose , you have drawn up all your medallic peo- ple , and indeed they make a much more formidable body than I could have imagined . You have shown ...
Page 15
... greater taste of its antiquities , and have fixed in my memory . several of the ruins that I have now forgotten . For my part , says Cynthio , I think there are at Rome enow modern works of architecture to employ any reasonable man . I ...
... greater taste of its antiquities , and have fixed in my memory . several of the ruins that I have now forgotten . For my part , says Cynthio , I think there are at Rome enow modern works of architecture to employ any reasonable man . I ...
Page 16
... greater show of the useful- ness of medals , if I would take the methods of others , and prove to you that all arts and sciences receive a considerable illustration from this study . I must , however , tell you , that medals and the ...
... greater show of the useful- ness of medals , if I would take the methods of others , and prove to you that all arts and sciences receive a considerable illustration from this study . I must , however , tell you , that medals and the ...
Page 21
... greater variety of epithets : so that you - often meet with little hints and suggestions in a poet that give a great illustration to the customs , actions , ornaments , and all kinds of antiquities that are to be met with on ancient ...
... greater variety of epithets : so that you - often meet with little hints and suggestions in a poet that give a great illustration to the customs , actions , ornaments , and all kinds of antiquities that are to be met with on ancient ...
Page 66
... greater number . Horace has turned this comparison into ridicule seventeen hundred years ago . Laudat Brutum , laudatque cohortem , Solem Asia Brutum appellat He praiseth Brutus much and all his train ; He calls him Asia's sun- HOR ...
... greater number . Horace has turned this comparison into ridicule seventeen hundred years ago . Laudat Brutum , laudatque cohortem , Solem Asia Brutum appellat He praiseth Brutus much and all his train ; He calls him Asia's sun- HOR ...
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Common terms and phrases
ancient antiquities Antoninus Pius appear arms atque beautiful Cæsar Campania Christianity church Claudian Commodus CREECH disciples DRYDEN duke emperor enemy famous fancy figure formerly France French Georgic give grotto hand head heathen Hesiod honour inhabitants inscription Irenæus Italy Julius Cæsar kind king lake learned lived look Lucius Verus marble Marcus Aurelius medals mentioned Mevania miracles modern mountains multitude Naples nation nature noble observed occasion old coins old Roman Ovid Pagan palace particular passage persons pieces pillars present prince quæ reason reign religion represented republic rise river rocks Rome ruins S. C. Reverse Saviour Saviour's history says Cynthio says Eugenius says Philander seen side Silius Italicus Spanish monarchy stands statues suppose take notice temple Teverone thou thought Tiberius tion town Trajan verse VIRG Virgil whole
Popular passages
Page 437 - Whosoever . therefore shall confess Me before men, him will I confess also before My Father which is in heaven. But whosoever shall deny Me before men, him will I also deny before My Father which is in heaven.
Page 95 - For they that led us away captive, required of us then a song, and melody in our heaviness : Sing us one of the songs of Sion. 4 How shall we sing the LORD'S song in a strange land?
Page 1 - Judea weeps. Now scantier limits the proud arch confine, And scarce are seen the prostrate Nile or Rhine ; A small Euphrates through the piece is roll'd, And little eagles wave their wings in gold.
Page 176 - The colds of winter and the heats of summer, are equally incapable of molesting you. A serene or a clouded sky are indifferent to you. Let the earth abound in fruits, or be cursed with scarcity, it has no influence on your welfare. You live secure in rains...
Page 2 - Th' inscription value, but the rust adore. This the blue varnish, that the green endears, The sacred rust of twice ten hundred years ! To gain Pescennius one employs his schemes, One grasps a Cecrops in ecstatic dreams.
Page 38 - But the sweet essence of amomum drains: And watches the rich gums Arabia bears, While yet in tender dew they drop their tears. He, (his...
Page 200 - His reputation quickly peopled it, and gave rise to the republic which calls itself after his name: so that the commonwealth of Marino may boast at least of a nobler original than that of Rome, the one having been at first an asylum for robbers and murderers, and the other a resort of , persons eminent for their piety and devotion.
Page 13 - ... in medals : for my own part, I am very much embarrassed in the names and ranks of the several Roman emperors, and find it difficult to recollect upon occasion the different parts of their history : but your medallists, upon the first naming of an emperor, will immediately tell you his age, family, and life. To remember where he enters in the succession, they only consider in what part of the cabinet he lies ; and by running over in their thoughts such a particular drawer, will give you an account...
Page 202 - ... twice successively. The third officer is the commissary, who judges in all civil and criminal matters. But because the many alliances, friendships, and intermarriages, as well as the personal feuds and animosities, that happen among so small a people might obstruct the course of justice, if one of their own number had the distribution of it, they have always a foreigner for th'is employ, whom they choose for three years, and maintain out of the public stock.
Page 211 - It was indeed the most proper place in the world for a fury to make her exit, after she had filled a nation with distractions and alarms; and I believe every reader's imagination is pleased, when he sees the angry goddess thus sinking, as it were, in a tempest, and plunging herself into hell, amidst such a scene of horror and confusion.