Letters on Literature, Taste, and Composition: Addressed to His Son, Bind 1Richard Phillips, 1808 - 623 sider |
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Side 3
... become united . Thus the ideas of the figure and colour of bodies admitted by the eye are always combined , and these may be still as- sociated with another idea admitted by means of the touch B 2 PRINCIPLE OF ASSOCIATION .
... become united . Thus the ideas of the figure and colour of bodies admitted by the eye are always combined , and these may be still as- sociated with another idea admitted by means of the touch B 2 PRINCIPLE OF ASSOCIATION .
Side 4
Addressed to His Son George Gregory. sociated with another idea admitted by means of the touch . Thus the idea , or picture formed in the mind of any object , is complex , or com- posed of several ideas united : of figure , colour , and ...
Addressed to His Son George Gregory. sociated with another idea admitted by means of the touch . Thus the idea , or picture formed in the mind of any object , is complex , or com- posed of several ideas united : of figure , colour , and ...
Side 12
... mean by an ornamented style ; it is that in which lively description , similies , al- lusions , metaphors , and the other figures of rhetoric abound . Poetry always interests a reader of taste more than prose . The causes of this are ...
... mean by an ornamented style ; it is that in which lively description , similies , al- lusions , metaphors , and the other figures of rhetoric abound . Poetry always interests a reader of taste more than prose . The causes of this are ...
Side 48
... means to avoid , and to what lengths of folly human reason will go , when it pretends to account for every thing . Though we discard , however , Dr. Hartley's theory of the ridiculous , yet I think we may fairly say that it always ...
... means to avoid , and to what lengths of folly human reason will go , when it pretends to account for every thing . Though we discard , however , Dr. Hartley's theory of the ridiculous , yet I think we may fairly say that it always ...
Side 55
... mean or little . " The Greeks renowned , so Homer writes , " For well - soaled boots , as well as fights . " - HUD . The order is reversed , however , in some in- stances of the mock - heroic , as in the Lutrin of Boileau , and the ...
... mean or little . " The Greeks renowned , so Homer writes , " For well - soaled boots , as well as fights . " - HUD . The order is reversed , however , in some in- stances of the mock - heroic , as in the Lutrin of Boileau , and the ...
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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