Elements of CriticismConner & Cooke, 1836 - 504 psl. |
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11 psl.
... pleasure as existing in the nostrils along with the impression made by the rose upon that organ . And the same will be the result of experiments with respect to every feeling of taste , touch , and smell . Touch affords the most ...
... pleasure as existing in the nostrils along with the impression made by the rose upon that organ . And the same will be the result of experiments with respect to every feeling of taste , touch , and smell . Touch affords the most ...
12 psl.
... pleasure , which has no relish but while we are in vigor , is ill qualified for that office ; but the finer pleasures of sense , which occupy without exhausting the mind , are finely qualified to restore its usual tone after severe ...
... pleasure , which has no relish but while we are in vigor , is ill qualified for that office ; but the finer pleasures of sense , which occupy without exhausting the mind , are finely qualified to restore its usual tone after severe ...
13 psl.
... pleasures of the eye and ear have , accordingly , a natural apti- tude to draw us from the immoderate gratification of ... pleasure to the eye and the ear , disregarding the inferior senses . A taste for these arts is a plant that grows ...
... pleasures of the eye and ear have , accordingly , a natural apti- tude to draw us from the immoderate gratification of ... pleasure to the eye and the ear , disregarding the inferior senses . A taste for these arts is a plant that grows ...
14 psl.
... pleasure we derive from them . To the man who resigns himself to feeling without inter- posing any judgment , poetry , music , painting , are mere pastime . In the prime of life , indeed , they are delightful , being supported by the ...
... pleasure we derive from them . To the man who resigns himself to feeling without inter- posing any judgment , poetry , music , painting , are mere pastime . In the prime of life , indeed , they are delightful , being supported by the ...
17 psl.
... pleasure and pain : and , though he flatters himself with having made some progress in that important science , he is , however , too sensible of its extent and difficulty , to undertake it professedly , or to avow it as the chief ...
... pleasure and pain : and , though he flatters himself with having made some progress in that important science , he is , however , too sensible of its extent and difficulty , to undertake it professedly , or to avow it as the chief ...
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accent action Æneid agreeable appear beauty blank verse Cæsar capital cause Chap circumstance color connected degree Demetrius Phalereus disagreeable distinguished effect elevation emotions Eneid epic epic poem epic poetry Euripides example expression external signs feeling figure Fingal foregoing garden give grandeur grief heav'n Hence Henry IV Hexameter human ideas Iliad imagination imitation impression Jane Shore Julius Cæsar kind language less light long syllable manner means melody metaphor mind motion Mourning Bride nature never object observation ornaments Othello pain Paradise Lost passion pause peculiar perceive perception person pleasant pleasure poem principle produce pronounced proper proportion raised reader reason regularity relation relish resemblance respect rhyme Richard II rule scarcely scene sense sensible sentiments Shakspeare short syllables signify simile sion sound spectator Spondees taste termed thee things thou thought tion tone tragedy uniformity variety verse words writers