The Port FolioEditor and Asbury Dickens, 1815 |
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... pleasure or pain . They give a life and fresh- ness to our recollections which no voluntary effort of the mind can reach . Those softened pictures of past scenes which the memory is ever presenting to our view commonly indeed appear in ...
... pleasure or pain . They give a life and fresh- ness to our recollections which no voluntary effort of the mind can reach . Those softened pictures of past scenes which the memory is ever presenting to our view commonly indeed appear in ...
Strona 227
... pleasure . We see the same effect of cultivation among amateurs of music whose organs are steadily acquiring accuracy and nicety , and whose susceptibility to the delights of melody and the fuller powers of harmony sometimes attains the ...
... pleasure . We see the same effect of cultivation among amateurs of music whose organs are steadily acquiring accuracy and nicety , and whose susceptibility to the delights of melody and the fuller powers of harmony sometimes attains the ...
Strona 228
... pleasure they derive from the one source , the less they can derive from the other . Although there are not many who are so remarkably insensible to the excitement of sur- rounding objects as sir Isaac Newton was said to be , yet ...
... pleasure they derive from the one source , the less they can derive from the other . Although there are not many who are so remarkably insensible to the excitement of sur- rounding objects as sir Isaac Newton was said to be , yet ...
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