eighteenth century english literature |
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Seite 197
19 Here he feels the excess of light , in which sublimitycombined of majesty and terror - is found : The parent sun himself Seems o'er this world of slaves to tyrannize , And , with oppressive ray the roseate bloom Of beauty blasting ...
19 Here he feels the excess of light , in which sublimitycombined of majesty and terror - is found : The parent sun himself Seems o'er this world of slaves to tyrannize , And , with oppressive ray the roseate bloom Of beauty blasting ...
Seite 199
Mallett divided his attention equally between the terrestrial world and the cosmic universe , devoting one book to each ; in that division Thomson's distinction between the beauty of color and the sublimity of light was implicit .
Mallett divided his attention equally between the terrestrial world and the cosmic universe , devoting one book to each ; in that division Thomson's distinction between the beauty of color and the sublimity of light was implicit .
Seite 203
In this passage we approach Akenside's theory of the sublimity of light . To be sure , there are moments in The Pleasures of Imagination , when Akenside merely followed the Scriptural , Pythagorean and Miltonic fashion of referring ...
In this passage we approach Akenside's theory of the sublimity of light . To be sure , there are moments in The Pleasures of Imagination , when Akenside merely followed the Scriptural , Pythagorean and Miltonic fashion of referring ...
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Inhalt
THE ESSAY ON CRITICISM | 42 |
POPE SEEN THROUGH HIS LETTERS | 62 |
THE CONCISENESS OF SWIFT | 84 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Addison appear beauty become called character common concerned course criticism Crusoe diction economic effect eighteenth century England English Essay evil example existence experience expression eyes fact feel Fielding friends give hand heart human idea imagination important individual interest Johnson kind King labour later least less letters light lines literary literature Lives London look manner matter means metaphor mind moral nature never object observe once original passage passions perfect perhaps philosophy pleasure poem poetic poetry poets political Pope Pope's possible present principle produce reader reason remark satire seems sense social society spirit style sublime Swift theory things thought tion tradition true turn universal whole writing written wrote