| 1827 - 968 sider
...be adapted to sculpture ; and some such conception is in fact embodied in the sublime head of Memnon in the British Museum, in which are united the expressions...frail as drapery should tend to disturb its highest effects. him in the minutest trifle. True, he assumed or laid aside at pleasure. He had a model ; yet,... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1854 - 322 sider
...be adapted to sculpture ; and some such conception is in fact embodied in the sublime head of Memnou in the British Museum, in which are united the expressions...frail as drapery should tend to disturb its highest effects. NOTE 11. Page 255. ' Treated by the poet, on the contrary, they are substantial concrete persons,'... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1856 - 350 sider
...adapted to sculpture ; and some such conception is in fact embodied in the sublime head of ilemnon in the British Museum, in which are united the expressions...frail as drapery should tend to disturb its highest effects. NOTE 11. Page 267. ' Treated by the poet, on the contrary, they are substantial concrete persons,'... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1862 - 386 sider
...be adapted to sculpture; and some such conception is in fact embodied in the sublime head of Memnon in the British Museum, in which are united the expressions...it then becomes plain why a thing so accidental and BO frail as drapery should tend to disturb its highest effects. type; and this originality is, in fact,... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1863 - 332 sider
...adapted to sculpture; and some such conception is in fact embodied in the sublime head of Memnon in tho British Museum, in which are united the expressions of ineffable benignity with infinite duration. I!ut, to return from this illustration, if the sense of the enduring and the essential bo thus predominant... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1890 - 494 sider
...be adapted to sculpture ; and some such conception is in fact embodied in the sublime head of Memnon in the British Museum, in which are united the expressions...frail as drapery should tend to disturb its highest effects.—Tr. room enough was left him for originality of thought to be manifested in his deviations... | |
| Thomas De Quincey, David Masson - 1897 - 490 sider
...conception is in fact embodied in the sublime head of Memnon in the British Museum, in which are xinited the expressions of ineffable benignity with infinite...frail as drapery should tend to disturb its highest effects.—Tr. LESSTNG'S LAOCOON 197 com enough was left him for originality of thought to be manifested... | |
| 1827 - 944 sider
...; and some such conption is in fact embodied in the sublime head of Memnon in the British Museum, i which are united the expressions of ineffable benignity with infinite duration. But i return from this illustration, if the sense of the enduring and the essential be thus 'edomi nan... | |
| Frederick Burwick - 2010 - 218 sider
...be adapted to sculpture; and some such conception is in fact embodied in the sublime head of Memnon in the British Museum, in which are united the expressions of ineffable benignity with infinite duration. (DQ 11:196) Dc Quincey goes on in his translation to present Lessing's claim that imitation does not... | |
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