The Spectator, Svazek 8J. F. Dove, 1827 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 6-10 z 42
Strana 14
... ideas we receive from statues , descriptions , or such - like occasions , are the same that were once actually in our view , it must not be understood that we had once seen the very place , action , or person , that are carved or ...
... ideas we receive from statues , descriptions , or such - like occasions , are the same that were once actually in our view , it must not be understood that we had once seen the very place , action , or person , that are carved or ...
Strana 15
... ideas arising from the original objects with the ideas we receive from the statue , picture , description , or sound , that represents them . It is impossible for us to give the necessary reason why this operation of the mind is ...
... ideas arising from the original objects with the ideas we receive from the statue , picture , description , or sound , that represents them . It is impossible for us to give the necessary reason why this operation of the mind is ...
Strana 16
... ideas than the sight of things themselves . The reader finds a scene drawn in stronger colours , and painted more to ... ideas ; but when the poet represents it , he may either give us a more complex idea of it , or only raise in us such ...
... ideas than the sight of things themselves . The reader finds a scene drawn in stronger colours , and painted more to ... ideas ; but when the poet represents it , he may either give us a more complex idea of it , or only raise in us such ...
Strana 17
... ideas hang together , & c . A natural cause assigned for it . How to perfect the imagination of a writer . Who among the ancient poets had this faculty in its greatest perfection . Homer excelled in imagining what is great ; Virgil in ...
... ideas hang together , & c . A natural cause assigned for it . How to perfect the imagination of a writer . Who among the ancient poets had this faculty in its greatest perfection . Homer excelled in imagining what is great ; Virgil in ...
Strana 18
... ideas which we received from such a prospect or garden , having entered the mind at the same time , have a set of traces , belonging to them in the brain , bordering very near upon one another ; when , therefore , any one of these ideas ...
... ideas which we received from such a prospect or garden , having entered the mind at the same time , have a set of traces , belonging to them in the brain , bordering very near upon one another ; when , therefore , any one of these ideas ...
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acquainted advantage Æneid agreeable appear attend August 23 beautiful behold body Callisthenes consider conversation countenance creature delight desire discourse dress entertainment Epig eyes fancy father favour fortune garden gentleman give Gloriana hand happy heart honour hope humble servant humour ideas Iliad imagination July 14 kind lady letter live look mankind manner marriage matter mind modesty nature never objects obliged observed occasion Ovid pain paper particular pass passion Penthesilea Pentheus perfection persons Pharamond pitch the bar pleasant pleased pleasure Plutarch Plutus poet poor present racter reader reason received Rechteren reflection Samson Agonistes satisfaction seems Sempronia sense shew sight Sir Robert Viner soul SPECTATOR spirits tell temper thing thou thought tion town VIRG Virgil virtue whole woman women words writing young