Spectator
Cited as Spectator. — 73 quotations
Administer
A fountain . . . administers to the pleasure as well as the plenty of the place.
Adulterate
The present war has . . . adulterated our tongue with strange words.
Animosity
Such [writings] as naturally conduce to inflame hatreds and make enmities irreconcilable.
Anticipate
I would not anticipate the relish of any happiness, nor feel the weight of any misery, before it actually arrives.
Atonement
When a man has been guilty of any vice, the best atonement be can make for it is, to warn others.
Aversion
It is not difficult for a man to see that a person has conceived an aversion for him.
Benignity
The benignity or inclemency of the season.
Beset
A robe of azure beset with drops of gold.
Billet-doux
A lover chanting out a billet-doux.
Blemish
The reliefs of an envious man are those little blemishes and imperfections that discover themselves in an illustrious character.
Board
We are several of us, gentlemen and ladies, who board in the same house.
Branch
To branch out into a long disputation.
Breasted
The close minister is buttoned up, and the brave officer open-breasted, on these occasions.
Brood
A hen followed by a brood of ducks.
Buffoonery
Nor that it will ever constitute a wit to conclude a tart piece of buffoonery with a “What makes you blush?”
Castrate
My . . . correspondent . . . has sent me the following letter, which I have castrated in some places.
Confusion
Confusion dwelt in every face And fear in every heart.
Connive
The artist is to teach them how to nod judiciously, and to connive with either eye.
Contempt
Little insults and contempts.
Cullyism
Less frequent instances of eminent cullyism.
Die
Letting the secret die within his own breast.
Blemishes may die away and disappear amidst the brightness.
Disguise
I have just left the right worshipful, and his myrmidons, about a sneaker of five gallons; the whole magistracy was pretty well disguised before I gave them the ship.
Dissociable
They came in two and two, though matched in the most dissociable manner.
dogmatic
Critics write in a positive, dogmatic way.
Drop
Takes care to drop in when he thinks you are just seated.
Elegance
The beautiful wildness of nature, without the nicer elegancies of art.
Equestrian
An equestrian lady appeared upon the plains.
Exorcise
Mr. Spectator . . . do all you can to exorcise crowds who are . . . processed as I am.
Favor
The porter owned that the gentleman favored his master.
Feint
Courtley's letter is but a feint to get off.
For
The writer will do what she please for all me.
Freak
She is restless and peevish, and sometimes in a freak will instantly change her habitation.
Indefinite
Though it is not infinite, it may be indefinite; though it is not boundless in itself, it may be so to human comprehension.
Initiate
He was initiated into half a dozen clubs before he was one and twenty.
Intoxication
That secret intoxication of pleasure.
Loveliness
If there is such a native loveliness in the sex as to make them victorious when in the wrong, how resistless their power when they are on the side of truth!
Luxuriancy
Flowers grow up in the garden in the greatest luxuriancy and profusion.
Luxury
Riches expose a man to pride and luxury.
Matter
Some young female seems to have carried matters so far, that she is ripe for asking advice.
Mock
That superior greatness and mock majesty.
Noise
Socrates lived in Athens during the great plague which has made so much noise in all ages.
Nonplus
He has been nonplused by Mr. Dry's desiring him to tell what it was that he endeavored to prove.
Odd
Locke's Essay would be a very odd book for a man to make himself master of, who would get a reputation by critical writings.
Outside
I threw open the door of my chamber, and found the family standing on the outside.
Patch
Ladies who patched both sides of their faces.
Pin
He . . . did not care a pin for her.
Pretty
The pretty gentleman is the most complaisant in the world.
Productive
This is turning nobility into a principle of virtue, and making it productive of merit.
Push
Ambition pushes the soul to such actions as are apt to procure honor to the actor.
Quite
The same actions may be aimed at different ends, and arise from quite contrary principles.
Raise
Miss Liddy can dance a jig, and raise paste.
Representativeness
Dr. Burnet observes, that every thought is attended with consciousness and representativeness.
Right
The lady has been disappointed on the right side.
Rise
A thought rose in me, which often perplexes men of contemplative natures.
Sedentary
The soul, considered abstractly from its passions, is of a remiss, sedentary nature.
Snatch
We have often little snatches of sunshine.
Sneaker
A sneaker of five gallons.
Soliloquy
Lovers are always allowed the comfort of soliloquy.
Stand
Readers by whose judgment I would stand or fall.
I took my stand upon an eminence . . . to look into their several ladings.
Startle
After having recovered from my first startle, I was very well pleased with the accident.
Sully
A noble and triumphant merit breaks through little spots and sullies in his reputation.
Superior
There is not in earth a spectacle more worthy than a great man superior to his sufferings.
Swing
They get on ropes, as you must have seen the children, and are swung by their men visitants.
Tawdry
He rails from morning to night at essenced fops and tawdry courtiers.
Therefore
He blushes; therefore he is guilty.
Unsight
There was a great confluence of chapmen, that resorted from every part, with a design to purchase, which they were to do “unsight unseen.”
Vociferation
Violent gesture and vociferation naturally shake the hearts of the ignorant.
Voucher
The great writers of that age stand up together as vouchers for one another's reputation.
Weakness
Many take pleasure in spreading abroad the weakness of an exalted character.
Wench
It is not a digression to talk of bawds in a discourse upon wenches.
Whistle
The countryman could not forbear smiling, . . . and by that means lost his whistle.