Q. Horatii Flacci Epistolae Ad Pisones, Et Augustum, Volume 1 |
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Page 91
... persons who never once thought of this artificial method of diftinguishing their ideas . There is then fome kind of perception , common to them and us , which has occafioned this uniformity in our ways of fpeaking which ART OF POETRY . 91.
... persons who never once thought of this artificial method of diftinguishing their ideas . There is then fome kind of perception , common to them and us , which has occafioned this uniformity in our ways of fpeaking which ART OF POETRY . 91.
Page 93
... person : by no means intend- ing that we have the fame feeling from the one as the other , but that in both cafes we are pleafed ; and that in both the imagination contri- butes to the pleasure . Now as every representative art is ...
... person : by no means intend- ing that we have the fame feeling from the one as the other , but that in both cafes we are pleafed ; and that in both the imagination contri- butes to the pleasure . Now as every representative art is ...
Page 94
... person may give birth to the paffion of love : yet to perceive the beauty , and to feel the paffion , are two different things . For every beautiful object does not produce love in every obferver , and the fame paffion is fome- times ...
... person may give birth to the paffion of love : yet to perceive the beauty , and to feel the paffion , are two different things . For every beautiful object does not produce love in every obferver , and the fame paffion is fome- times ...
Page 145
... persons of Hæmon and Antigone , with their real motives and views . In all in- different things , in which the paffions or in- terefts of their mafter were not concerned , even this chorus would of course preserve a moral character ...
... persons of Hæmon and Antigone , with their real motives and views . In all in- different things , in which the paffions or in- terefts of their mafter were not concerned , even this chorus would of course preserve a moral character ...
Page 176
... person , an agreeable fong : and those fongs were held by them moft agreeable , " which contained exhortations to virtue , or " other inftructions relative to their conduct in " life . " 66 And to give the reader a taste of these moral ...
... person , an agreeable fong : and those fongs were held by them moft agreeable , " which contained exhortations to virtue , or " other inftructions relative to their conduct in " life . " 66 And to give the reader a taste of these moral ...
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againſt ancient arifing Atellane beauty becauſe befides beſt cafe caft cauſe cenfure character chorus Cicero comedy COMMENTARY compofition confiftent courſe critic Dacier defign Diomedes drama Ennius epiftle eſpecially etiam Euripides expreffion exprefs facundia faid fame fatire fatyrs fays fcenes feems feen fenfe fentiments ferve feveral fhew fhewn fhould firft firſt fome fometimes fpeaks fpecies ftage ftate ftill fubject fuch fufficient fuppofe fure genius Greek hath himſelf Hippolytus Horace inftance inftruction itſelf juft juſt laft language leaſt lefs manner meaſure Medea Menander ment moft moral moſt mufic muft muſt nature neceffary numbers obferved occafion old comedy orichalco paffage paffion Peleus perfons philofopher Plautus pleaſure poem poet poet's poetry purpoſe quæ quid Quinctilian racter reader reafon refpect Roman rule ſeems ſenſe Shakeſpeare Sophocles ſpeaking ſpirit ſtage ſuch taſte Telephus thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe tibia tragedy tragic underſtood uſe words writers καὶ