New Monthly Magazine, and Universal Register, Volume 1Thomas Campbell, Samuel Carter Hall, Edward Bulwer Lytton Baron Lytton, Theodore Edward Hook, Thomas Hood, William Harrison Ainsworth, William Ainsworth Henry Colburn, 1821 |
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Page 131
... beauty ; and in like man- ner , its language has a beauty beyond contingent reality . Still , an ideally beautified diction may be adapted to the lowest as well as the highest characters of existence . The resemblance of life is not ...
... beauty ; and in like man- ner , its language has a beauty beyond contingent reality . Still , an ideally beautified diction may be adapted to the lowest as well as the highest characters of existence . The resemblance of life is not ...
Page 435
... beauty of forms arises altogether from the associations we connect with them , or the qualities of which they are expressive to us ; and Sir Joshua Reynolds , in discoursing upon personal beauty , maintains , that as nature , in every ...
... beauty of forms arises altogether from the associations we connect with them , or the qualities of which they are expressive to us ; and Sir Joshua Reynolds , in discoursing upon personal beauty , maintains , that as nature , in every ...
Page 567
... beauty is an accomplishment , which seems to have been much more highly valued by the ancients than by ourselves ; and indeed , in the Greek language , the adjective to express good and beautiful is the same . This sensibility to ...
... beauty is an accomplishment , which seems to have been much more highly valued by the ancients than by ourselves ; and indeed , in the Greek language , the adjective to express good and beautiful is the same . This sensibility to ...
Contents
CONTENTS | 1 |
CAMPBELLS Lectures on Poetry 1 129 377 489 | 16 |
Modern Improvements | 97 |
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admiration ancient appears Arabs Asturian beauty Caius Marius called celebrated character circumstances corn Corn Laws corregidor cultivation death delight doubt endeavoured England English equal eyes fancy father favour feeling flowers French genius give hand happy heart Hebrew honour hope hour human imagination increase Italy King labour lady Lady Hamilton land language laws letters living Lord Lord Byron Malthus means ment mind Mont Blanc moral Naples nation nature never night noble Numantia object observed occasion opinion passion person poet poetical poetry possess present prince principles produce profit racter rate of profit readers respect Roman scene Schiller Scott seems shew Socrates soon soul Spain spirit taste thee thing thou thought tion Troubadours truth Ugo Foscolo verse Viriatus Wangara whilst whole words writers young youth