An Abridgment of Elements of CriticismHaswell, Barrington & Haswell, 1839 - 300 páginas |
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Página 32
... produced by an agreeable object is invariably pleasant ; and the emotion produced by a disagreeable object is invaria ... produce painful emotions . Selfish passions are pleasant ; for self is always an agreeable object , or cause . A ...
... produced by an agreeable object is invariably pleasant ; and the emotion produced by a disagreeable object is invaria ... produce painful emotions . Selfish passions are pleasant ; for self is always an agreeable object , or cause . A ...
Página 33
... produce a good effect , the passion is agreeable : if the desire be , to do a wrong action in order to produce an ill effect , the passion is disagreeable . Thus , passions as well as actions are governed by the moral sense . These ...
... produce a good effect , the passion is agreeable : if the desire be , to do a wrong action in order to produce an ill effect , the passion is disagreeable . Thus , passions as well as actions are governed by the moral sense . These ...
Página 68
... produce two oppo- site feelings , the pleasant emotion of wonder , and the painful passion of terror : the novelty of the object produces the former directly , and contributes to the latter indirectly . Thus , when the subject is ...
... produce two oppo- site feelings , the pleasant emotion of wonder , and the painful passion of terror : the novelty of the object produces the former directly , and contributes to the latter indirectly . Thus , when the subject is ...
Contenido
Association of Ideas | 11 |
Emotions and Passions as pleasant and painful | 31 |
Resemblance of Emotions to their causes | 45 |
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Términos y frases comunes
accent action Æneid agreeable allegory appear arts beauty blank verse burlesque capital cause circumstances comparison congruity connexion criticism dignity disagreeable distinguished doth effect elevated ELOISA TO ABELARD emotions and passions emotions raised epic poem epic poetry expression external Falstaff figure figure of speech Fingal garden Give an example Give examples grandeur grief hath heaven Hence HENRY IV.-ACT ILIAD imagination imitation impression Jane Shore jects kind king language less light manner means melody metaphor mind motion Mozambic nature never novelty object observed ornament Ossian painful Paradise Lost pause person personification pity pleasant pleasure principle proper reader reason regularity relation relish resemblance respect rhyme RICHARD II.-ACT ridicule riety rule sense sensible sentiments Shakspeare simile sion sort sound species spectator speech sublime syllables taste termed thee things thou thought tion tragedy unity variety verse words writers