An Abridgment of Elements of CriticismRaynor, 1848 - 300 |
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Strona 29
... raise virtuous emotions ; which becoming stronger by exercise , tend to make us virtuous by habit , as well as by principle . Examples confined to real events are not so frequent as without other means to C 2 EMOTIONS AND PASSIONS . 29.
... raise virtuous emotions ; which becoming stronger by exercise , tend to make us virtuous by habit , as well as by principle . Examples confined to real events are not so frequent as without other means to C 2 EMOTIONS AND PASSIONS . 29.
Strona 33
... tend to good ; and a passion that deviates from our common nature must tend to ill . A passion that becomes an object of thought , may have the effect to produce a passion or emotion in the spectator ; for it is natural , that a social ...
... tend to good ; and a passion that deviates from our common nature must tend to ill . A passion that becomes an object of thought , may have the effect to produce a passion or emotion in the spectator ; for it is natural , that a social ...
Strona 34
... tends to render us savage and cruel , which is the case of re- venge . I value myself upon sympathy : I hate and ... tend to a habit of peevishness and 34 ELEMENTS OF CRITICISM .
... tends to render us savage and cruel , which is the case of re- venge . I value myself upon sympathy : I hate and ... tend to a habit of peevishness and 34 ELEMENTS OF CRITICISM .
Strona 35
Lord Henry Home Kames John Frost. menting , and tend to a habit of peevishness and dis- content . Social pains have a very different tendency : the pain of sympathy , for example , is not only volun- tary , but softens my temper , and ...
Lord Henry Home Kames John Frost. menting , and tend to a habit of peevishness and dis- content . Social pains have a very different tendency : the pain of sympathy , for example , is not only volun- tary , but softens my temper , and ...
Strona 46
... tend to just and rational ends , and , with rela- tion to each other , be duly balanced . The beauty of contrivance , so conspicuous in the human frame , is not confined to the rational part of our nature , but is visible over the whole ...
... tend to just and rational ends , and , with rela- tion to each other , be duly balanced . The beauty of contrivance , so conspicuous in the human frame , is not confined to the rational part of our nature , but is visible over the whole ...
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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