| William Hogarth - 1808 - 346 páginas
...being in the right in what we do, let us begin with imagining a line formed in the air by any supposed point at the end of a limb or part that is moved,...movements may be conceived at once is evident, on the least recollection; for whoever has seen a fine Arabian war-horse, unbacked and at liberty, arid in... | |
| William Hogarth - 1908 - 256 páginas
...being in the right in what we do, let us begin with imagining a line formed in the air by any supposed point at the end of a limb or part that is moved,...movements may be conceived at once is evident, on the least recollection, for whoever has seen a fine Arabian war horse, unbacked and at liberty, and in... | |
| William Hogarth - 1810 - 198 páginas
...formed by the pleafing movement of a fhip on the waves. Now in order to obtain a juft idea of a£tion at the fame time to be judicioufly fatisfied of being...recollection, for whoever has feen a fine arabian war-horfe, imback'd and at liberty, and in a wanton trot, cannot but remember what a large waving line his rifing,... | |
| Greg Clingham - 1998 - 212 páginas
...line or other in the air. ... let us begin with imagining a line formed in the air by any supposed point at the end of a limb or part that is moved,...movements may be conceived at once is evident, on the least recollection, for whoever has seen a fine arabian warhorse . . . cannot but remember what a large... | |
| Amal Asfour, Dr Paul Williamson, Paul Williamson - 1999 - 360 páginas
...case, a complete motion or action is apprehended instantaneously and interpreted as a line: ;í¡. And that thus much of movements may be conceived at once is evident, on the least recollection, for whoever has seen a fine arabian war-horse, unback'd and at liberty, and in... | |
| Chris Mounsey - 2001 - 310 páginas
...a trace of its movements in the air, so one could imagine "a line formed in the air by any supposed point at the end of a limb or part that is moved. "4:> The body that Hogarth envisioned had a coherent and immediate presence, such that each of its... | |
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