... advantages, whether in birth, fortune, or title, which one man enjoys above another, that it... The Guardian - Pàgina 263per Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele - 1734 - 358 pàginesVisualització completa - Sobre aquest llibre
| Joseph Addison - 1870 - 524 pàgines
...a mortal puffed up, and valuing himself above his neighbours, on any of these accounts, at the same time that he is obnoxious to all the common calamities of the species. To set this thought in its true light,* we will fancy, if you please, that yonder mole-hill is inhabited... | |
| David Thomas - 1876 - 494 pàgines
...a mortal puffed up, and valuing himself above his neighbours on any of these accounts, at the same time that he is obnoxious to all the common calamities of the species. To set this thought in its true light, we will fancy, if you please, that yonder molehill is inhabited... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1876 - 536 pàgines
...a mortal puffed up, and valuing himself above his neighbours, on any of these accounts, at the same time that he is obnoxious to all the common calamities of the species. To set this thought in its true light,* we will fancy, if you please, that yonder mole-hill is inhabited... | |
| 1754 - 394 pàgines
...which one man enjoys above another, that it muft certainly very much aftonifh, if it does not very much divert them, when they fee a mortal puffed up, and...he is obnoxious to all the common calamities of the fpecies. To fet this thought in its true light, we will fancy, if you pleafe, that yonder mole- hill... | |
| Joseph Addison - 1854 - 534 pàgines
...a mortal puffed up, and valuing himself above his neighbours, on any of these accounts, at the same time that he is obnoxious to all the common calamities of the species. To set this thought in its true light,* we will fancy, if you please, that yonder mole-hill is inhabited... | |
| John Hamilton Moore - 1806 - 402 pàgines
...a mortal puffed up, and valuing himself above his neighbours on any of these accounts, at the same time that he is obnoxious to all the common calamities of the species. of life only excepted) is endowed with human passions. How should we smile to hear one give us an account... | |
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