An Abridgment of Elements of CriticismRaynor, 1848 - 300 |
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Strona 32
... species of animals , particularly our own , and a conviction that this common nature is right or perfect , and that individuals ought to be made conformable to it . * A passion that deviates from the common nature , by being too strong ...
... species of animals , particularly our own , and a conviction that this common nature is right or perfect , and that individuals ought to be made conformable to it . * A passion that deviates from the common nature , by being too strong ...
Strona 55
... dis- tinguishes grandeur from beauty ; agreeableness is the genus of which beauty and grandeur are species . The emotion of grandeur is pleasant , and is serious rather GRANDEUR AND SUBLIMITY . 55 Grandeur and Sublimity.
... dis- tinguishes grandeur from beauty ; agreeableness is the genus of which beauty and grandeur are species . The emotion of grandeur is pleasant , and is serious rather GRANDEUR AND SUBLIMITY . 55 Grandeur and Sublimity.
Strona 56
... species of agreeableness ; that a beautiful ob- ject placed high , appearing more agreeable than for- merly , produces in the spectator a new emotion , term- ed the emotion of sublimity ; and that the perfection of order , regularity ...
... species of agreeableness ; that a beautiful ob- ject placed high , appearing more agreeable than for- merly , produces in the spectator a new emotion , term- ed the emotion of sublimity ; and that the perfection of order , regularity ...
Strona 62
... species of false sublime , known by the name of bombast , is common among writers of a mean genius ; it is a serious endeavor , by strained description , to raise a low or familiar subject above its rank ; which , instead of being ...
... species of false sublime , known by the name of bombast , is common among writers of a mean genius ; it is a serious endeavor , by strained description , to raise a low or familiar subject above its rank ; which , instead of being ...
Strona 63
Lord Henry Home Kames John Frost. Another species of false sublime , still more faulty than bombast , is to force elevation by introducing ima- ginary beings without preserving any propriety in their actions ; as if it were lawful to ...
Lord Henry Home Kames John Frost. Another species of false sublime , still more faulty than bombast , is to force elevation by introducing ima- ginary beings without preserving any propriety in their actions ; as if it were lawful to ...
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accent action agreeable allegory appear arts beauty blank verse burlesque Cæsar cause circumstances comparison congruity connexion couplet dignity disagreeable distinguished doth effect elevated emotion produced emotions and passions emotions raised epic poetry expression external Falstaff feeling figure of speech FINGAL garden Give an example Give examples grace grandeur grief hath heaven Hence HENRY IV.-ACT HUDIBRAS ILIAD imagination imitation impression inanimate Jane Shore jects kind king language less light manner means melody metaphor mind motion Mozambic nature never novelty o'er object observed ornament Ossian Othello painful PARADISE LOST pause person personification pleasure poem principle proper reason relation relish resemblance respect rhyme RICHARD II.-ACT ridicule riety rule SECOND PART HENRY sense sensible sentiments Shakspeare simile sion soliloquies sonification sort sound species spectator sublime syllables taste termed thee things thou thought tion tragedy variety verse words writers