Enlightened England: An Anthology of Eighteenth Century LiteratureW.W. Norton, 1947 - 1248 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 541
... pleasure may be traced in other authors . See Burke , Hutchinson , Gerard , the theory of agreeable sensations , & c.1 There seem however to be some objects which afford a pleasure not reducible to either of the foregoing heads . A ruin ...
... pleasure may be traced in other authors . See Burke , Hutchinson , Gerard , the theory of agreeable sensations , & c.1 There seem however to be some objects which afford a pleasure not reducible to either of the foregoing heads . A ruin ...
الصفحة 653
... pleasure , because it turns on pain , and be- cause it is different enough from any idea of positive pleasure . Whatever excites this delight I call sublime . The passions belong- ing to self - preservation are the strongest of all the ...
... pleasure , because it turns on pain , and be- cause it is different enough from any idea of positive pleasure . Whatever excites this delight I call sublime . The passions belong- ing to self - preservation are the strongest of all the ...
الصفحة 654
... pleasure we have in the object , the particular passion under this head called sympathy has the great- est extent . The nature of this passion is to put us in the place of another in whatever circumstance he is in , and to affect us in ...
... pleasure we have in the object , the particular passion under this head called sympathy has the great- est extent . The nature of this passion is to put us in the place of another in whatever circumstance he is in , and to affect us in ...
المحتوى
The titles of certain selections appear in smaller type These selections | 2 |
Daniel Defoe | 11 |
Isaac Watts | 57 |
حقوق النشر | |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
admiration Aeneid Ambrose Philips ancient appear beauty better Bettmann Archive Boswell called charms creature critics Dæmons David Hume death delight Ev'n ev'ry excellent fair fancy fear genius give Gothic grace Grongar Hill hand happy head hear heart heaven hill honor hope Horace Walpole Houyhnhnms human imagination imitation James Boswell John Gay Johnson kind kings ladies learning live look Lord mankind manner master mind Muse nature never night nymph o'er object observed Oliver Goldsmith once pain passions person pleasing pleasure poem poet poetry Pope pow'r praise pride reason rise round Samuel Johnson scene Scotland sense sentiment shade Shakespeare song soul spirit sweet taste thee things Thomas Warton thou thought thro tion told truth virtue walk whole wild wind writing wyllowe Yahoos