Elements of Criticism, 1 tomasS. Campbell & Son, E. Duyckinck, 1823 |
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xiii psl.
... train , II . Emotions and Passions , Part 1. Causes unfolded of the Emotions and Pas- Sect . sions : 1. Difference between Emotion and Passion . -Causes that are the most common and the most general . - Passion considered as productive ...
... train , II . Emotions and Passions , Part 1. Causes unfolded of the Emotions and Pas- Sect . sions : 1. Difference between Emotion and Passion . -Causes that are the most common and the most general . - Passion considered as productive ...
29 psl.
... Train . A MAN , while awake , is conscious of a continued train of perceptions and ideas passing in his mind . It requires no activity on his part to carry on the train . * At the same time , we learn from daily experience , that the ...
... Train . A MAN , while awake , is conscious of a continued train of perceptions and ideas passing in his mind . It requires no activity on his part to carry on the train . * At the same time , we learn from daily experience , that the ...
30 psl.
... train of thought . Taking a view of external objects , their in- herent properties are not more remarkable than the ... train of our thoughts is in a great measure regulated by the foregoing relations : an external object is no sooner ...
... train of thought . Taking a view of external objects , their in- herent properties are not more remarkable than the ... train of our thoughts is in a great measure regulated by the foregoing relations : an external object is no sooner ...
31 psl.
... train , we cannot dissolve the train altogether , by carrying on our thoughts in a loose manner without any connexion . So far doth our power extend ; and that power is suffici- ent for all useful purposes : to have more power , would ...
... train , we cannot dissolve the train altogether , by carrying on our thoughts in a loose manner without any connexion . So far doth our power extend ; and that power is suffici- ent for all useful purposes : to have more power , would ...
32 psl.
... train of ideas ; which is , that , in the minds of some persons , thoughts and circumstances crowd upon each other by the slightest connexions . I ascribe this to a bluntness in the discerning faculty ; for a person who cannot ...
... train of ideas ; which is , that , in the minds of some persons , thoughts and circumstances crowd upon each other by the slightest connexions . I ascribe this to a bluntness in the discerning faculty ; for a person who cannot ...
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action Æneid agreeable anger animal love appear arts beauty burlesque Cæsar chapter circumstances colour congruity connexion degree desire dignity disagreeable distress doth effect elevation emotion produced emotion raised emotions and passions example expression external signs Falstaff feeling figure final cause give grandeur gratification habit hath Hence Henry IV Hudibras Iago ideal presence ideas Iliad impression influence instances jects Julius Caesar kind King Lear less manner means mind motion never nexion novelty objects of sight observation occasion opposite Othello painful emotion painful passion Paradise Lost perceive person pity pleasant emotion pleasure present produceth propensity proper proportion propriety punish qualities racter reason relation relish remarkable resemblance respect Richard II ridicule riety risible scarce Sejanus selfish sense sensible sentiments Shakspeare sion slight spectator sublime succession surprise taste termed things thou thought tion train of perceptions tural uniformity variety words