The Spectator, 8. kötetJ. F. Dove, 1827 |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 89 találatból.
3. oldal
... eye , if we saw them only in their proper figures and motions : and what reason can we assign for their exciting in us many of those ideas which are different from any thing that exists in the objects themselves ( for such are light and ...
... eye , if we saw them only in their proper figures and motions : and what reason can we assign for their exciting in us many of those ideas which are different from any thing that exists in the objects themselves ( for such are light and ...
6. oldal
... eye , and from their similitude to other ob- jects . We are pleased as well with comparing their beauties , as with surveying them , and can represent them to our minds , either as copies or originals . Hence it is that we take delight ...
... eye , and from their similitude to other ob- jects . We are pleased as well with comparing their beauties , as with surveying them , and can represent them to our minds , either as copies or originals . Hence it is that we take delight ...
12. oldal
... eye may take in two - thirds of the surface ; but , as in such bodies , the sight must split upon several angles , it does not take in one uniform idea , but several ideas of the same . kind . Look upon the outside of a dome , your eye ...
... eye may take in two - thirds of the surface ; but , as in such bodies , the sight must split upon several angles , it does not take in one uniform idea , but several ideas of the same . kind . Look upon the outside of a dome , your eye ...
13. oldal
... eyes . AT first divided the pleasures of the imagination into such as arise from objects that are actually before our eyes , or that once entered in at our eyes , and are after- C ward called up into the mind either barely by its No 416 ...
... eyes . AT first divided the pleasures of the imagination into such as arise from objects that are actually before our eyes , or that once entered in at our eyes , and are after- C ward called up into the mind either barely by its No 416 ...
16. oldal
... eye ; but in its description , the poet gives us as free a view of it as he pleases , and discovers to us several parts , that either we did not attend to , or that lay out of our sight when we first beheld it . As we look on any object ...
... eye ; but in its description , the poet gives us as free a view of it as he pleases , and discovers to us several parts , that either we did not attend to , or that lay out of our sight when we first beheld it . As we look on any object ...
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acquainted advantage Æneid agreeable appear attend August 23 beautiful behold body Callisthenes consider conversation countenance creature delight desire discourse dress entertainment Epig eyes fancy father favour fortune garden gentleman give Gloriana hand happy heart honour hope humble servant humour ideas Iliad imagination July 14 kind lady letter live look mankind manner marriage matter mind modesty nature never objects obliged observed occasion Ovid pain paper particular pass passion Penthesilea Pentheus perfection persons Pharamond pitch the bar pleasant pleased pleasure Plutarch Plutus poet poor present racter reader reason received Rechteren reflection Samson Agonistes satisfaction seems Sempronia sense shew sight Sir Robert Viner soul SPECTATOR spirits tell temper thing thou thought tion town VIRG Virgil virtue whole woman women words writing young