Letters on Literature, Taste, and Composition: Addressed to His Son, Bind 1Richard Phillips, 1808 - 623 sider |
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Side 5
... appear a digression is in reality more connected with our subject than at first sight may appear . For much of the pleasure derived from the fine arts , and particularly from poetry and oratory , may be resolved , in part at least ...
... appear a digression is in reality more connected with our subject than at first sight may appear . For much of the pleasure derived from the fine arts , and particularly from poetry and oratory , may be resolved , in part at least ...
Side 6
... appears to approach very near to a mere pleasure of the sense ; and it is per- haps from its connexion with poetry , or rather from its subservience to it , that it has been class- ed among the superior arts , or those which ad ...
... appears to approach very near to a mere pleasure of the sense ; and it is per- haps from its connexion with poetry , or rather from its subservience to it , that it has been class- ed among the superior arts , or those which ad ...
Side 38
... appears a pure and unmixed pleasure arising from the gentler agitation , and is less vi- vid than that produced by the sublime . The sublime also differs from the beautiful , in being only conversant with great objects . It differs from ...
... appears a pure and unmixed pleasure arising from the gentler agitation , and is less vi- vid than that produced by the sublime . The sublime also differs from the beautiful , in being only conversant with great objects . It differs from ...
Side 40
... dedit . " JUVENAL . 46 Compassion proper to mankind appears , " Which nature witnessed when she gave us tears . " TATE . It is of little consequence whether the tale that excites 40 THE PATHETIC . LETTER V The Pathetic.
... dedit . " JUVENAL . 46 Compassion proper to mankind appears , " Which nature witnessed when she gave us tears . " TATE . It is of little consequence whether the tale that excites 40 THE PATHETIC . LETTER V The Pathetic.
Side 44
... appears , " My haggard eyes are bath'd in gushing tears ; 66 Thy loved idea rushes to my heart , " And stern despair suspends the lifted dart . " O could I burst those fetters which restrain 66 My struggling limbs , and waft thee o'er ...
... appears , " My haggard eyes are bath'd in gushing tears ; 66 Thy loved idea rushes to my heart , " And stern despair suspends the lifted dart . " O could I burst those fetters which restrain 66 My struggling limbs , and waft thee o'er ...
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3dly 4thly admire afford allegory animated antient appears argument arrangement beautiful Blair book of Job called catachresis Cicero circumstances common comparison composition conclude correct critic DEAR JOHN Demosthenes didactic discourse divine effect elegant eloquence example excellence excited exordium expression fancy figurative language frequently genius Gibbon guage harmony hearers Hudibras humour ideas imagery imagination instance introduced irony Isocrates kind letter Livy Lord manner mean ment metaphors metonymy mind modern narrative nature neral never nosyllable object obscurity observed orations oratory ornament passion pathetic perhaps person Pitt plain pleasure poetry principal prose prosopopoeia reader remark resemblance respect rhetoric ridiculous rules scarcely senate sense sentence sermons Shakspeare short sion Sisera sometimes speak speaker species speech style sublime synecdoche taste tence thing thou thought tion trochee truth tural Turenne verb verse words writer young