Guide to Social Happiness |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 84
Page 79
... sense such impressions as are most intimately connected with refined and intellectual ideas ; and it is to language that we appeal for the most forcible and obvious proofs that all our poetic feelings owe their existence to association ...
... sense such impressions as are most intimately connected with refined and intellectual ideas ; and it is to language that we appeal for the most forcible and obvious proofs that all our poetic feelings owe their existence to association ...
Page 171
... sense ; a phenome- non which it is not often our misfortune to behold ; and I should account for the ex- traordinary bias given to the public taste by the works of Byron , as arising from the power of his genius rather than the pecu ...
... sense ; a phenome- non which it is not often our misfortune to behold ; and I should account for the ex- traordinary bias given to the public taste by the works of Byron , as arising from the power of his genius rather than the pecu ...
Page 177
... sense of sublimity - to calculate without ar- the slave of art , and he studies how to imi- riving at an idea of infinity — to measure , tate the variety , the splendour , and the mag- without reference to illimitable space to re ...
... sense of sublimity - to calculate without ar- the slave of art , and he studies how to imi- riving at an idea of infinity — to measure , tate the variety , the splendour , and the mag- without reference to illimitable space to re ...
Contents
THE HALL AND THE COTTAGE | 7 |
ELLEN EKSDALE 68 | 68 |
THE CURATES WIDOW 83 | 83 |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
abstinence admiration affection Agnes Alice amongst Andrew Miller Arnold associations beauty behold better birds blessing bright brow called character charm child choly cival colour comfort consola countenance creatures dark deep delight duty earth enjoyment Eskdale evil exis feeling felt flowers habits hand happiness heard heart heaven hope hour human idea imagination innu intel kind Lady Forbes Langley less light listen live look Lord Lord Byron Mary melan melancholy ment mind ministers of religion misanthrope moral morning mother nature ness never night object pain passions picture pleasure poet poetical poetry poor racter scene silent smile society soul sound speak spirit sublime suffering sweet tain taste tears tell tence tenderness thee thing thou thought timately tion truth turned uncon voice walk wandering weary William Clare woman words young