The Port FolioEditor and Asbury Dickens, 1815 |
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Pagina 158
... objects , and to a multitude of other associations , yet figures the most fantastic are occasionally among the most pleas- ing , and a very marked difference is often perceptible between the beauty of two objects which differ in nothing ...
... objects , and to a multitude of other associations , yet figures the most fantastic are occasionally among the most pleas- ing , and a very marked difference is often perceptible between the beauty of two objects which differ in nothing ...
Pagina 222
... objects , or by the same per- sons judging differently of the same forms and colours in different objects , no conclusion can be drawn against the existence of phy- sical beauty , that may not be brought to show that sugar is not sweet ...
... objects , or by the same per- sons judging differently of the same forms and colours in different objects , no conclusion can be drawn against the existence of phy- sical beauty , that may not be brought to show that sugar is not sweet ...
Pagina 223
... objects to express intellectual pro- perties , and sometimes from the latter to express the qualities of sensible objects , thus while we say that colours are " grave or gay , " that forms are " delicate or modest , " we also speak of ...
... objects to express intellectual pro- perties , and sometimes from the latter to express the qualities of sensible objects , thus while we say that colours are " grave or gay , " that forms are " delicate or modest , " we also speak of ...
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Aden admiration agreeable American ancient animals appear arms army Atalantis Ausonius beauty Botherum British called Canaan Canaanites captain cause Chaldee character colours command degree delight doubt earth Edinburgh Review enemy England English English language fame favour feel fire fort Erie French genius gentleman give glory Gratian heart Hebrew honour human Iago Irish language island labour land language learned light literary literature lived manner means ment merit military mind moral nation nature never night object observation occasion officer opinion original passage peace perhaps Phenicians pistil plant Plautus pleasure poet PORT FOLIO possess present racter readers remarks respect Sackett's Harbour sensibility sensient Shakspeare Sophocles soul spirit supposed talents taste thee thing thou Tibullus tion troops truth vegetable virtue Voltaire voluntarity whole words writers young