Lectures on Poetry and General Literature: Delivered at the Royal Institution in 1830 and 1831Longman, Rees, Orme, Browne, Green, & Longman, 1833 - 394 ページ |
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... language ; the earliest perpetuation of thought : it existed before prose in history , before music in melody , before painting in description , and before sculpture in imagery . Anterior to the discovery of letters , it was employed to ...
... language ; the earliest perpetuation of thought : it existed before prose in history , before music in melody , before painting in description , and before sculpture in imagery . Anterior to the discovery of letters , it was employed to ...
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... language and sentiments are so intimately connected , that they are remembered to- gether ; they are soul and body , which cannot be separated without death , —a death , in which the dis- solution of the one causes the disappearance of ...
... language and sentiments are so intimately connected , that they are remembered to- gether ; they are soul and body , which cannot be separated without death , —a death , in which the dis- solution of the one causes the disappearance of ...
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... language , or does not appeal to memory , is simply a sensual and vague , though an innocent and highly exhilarating delight , con- veying no direct improvement to the heart , and leaving little permanent impression upon the mind . When ...
... language , or does not appeal to memory , is simply a sensual and vague , though an innocent and highly exhilarating delight , con- veying no direct improvement to the heart , and leaving little permanent impression upon the mind . When ...
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... language , addressed only to the eye , for the sounds , whatever be our pro- nunciation , are little more than imaginary ; — Cicero and Demosthenes have exercised no such power over posterity as Homer and Virgil have done , though the ...
... language , addressed only to the eye , for the sounds , whatever be our pro- nunciation , are little more than imaginary ; — Cicero and Demosthenes have exercised no such power over posterity as Homer and Virgil have done , though the ...
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... language like that of the gods . Plato was the most poetical of writers in prose , because , it has been said , he could not excel Homer in verse , and at the head of one or the other species of literature he had determined to be ...
... language like that of the gods . Plato was the most poetical of writers in prose , because , it has been said , he could not excel Homer in verse , and at the head of one or the other species of literature he had determined to be ...
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多く使われている語句
admiration Æneid affections amidst ancient beauty blank verse cadence character circumstances colour composition contemporaries death delight diction Dryden earth Egyptians eloquence employed English equally excellence exquisite Faerie Queene fancy feel genius glory Greece Greek hand harmony heart heaven Henry Kirke White hieroglyphics Homer honour human ideas Iliad images imagination invention Joanna Baillie kind labours Lamech language latter learning less lines literature living Lord Lord Byron ment metre Milton mind modern moral nations nature never once original painting Paradise Lost passage passions peculiar perfect perpetual Pisistratus pleonasm poem poet poetical poetry present prose reader rhyme Robert Burns ROBERT SOUTHEY Roman Saracens scarcely scene sculpture sentiments song soul sound Spenserian stanza spirit splendour stanzas stars strains style sublime syllables taste thee theme things thou thought tion tongue truth uttered verse Virgil whole words writing