| Mark Akenside - 1744 - 110 pages
...appearances of nature, and all the vaiious entertainment we meet with either in poetry, painting, mufic, or any of the elegant arts, might be deducible from one or other .% of thefe principles in- the conftitution of the human' mind, which are here eftablifh'd and explain'd.... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1779 - 388 pages
...nature, and all the 'various entertainment we meet ivitb either in poetry, painting, mujic, or atiy of the elegant arts, might be deducible from one or other of thofe principles in the couftitution of the human mind, 'which are here ejiablijhed and explained.... | |
| Mark Akenside - 1744 - 124 pages
...Plcafurcs cf Imagination. all the various entertainment we meet with either in poetry, painting, mufic, or any of the elegant arts, might be deducible from one or other of thofe principles in the conflitution of the human mind, which are here eftablifhcd and explained. In... | |
| 1802 - 302 pages
...whatever out imagination feels from the agreeable appearances of nature, and all the various entertainment we meet 'with either in poetry* painting, music, or any of the elegant arts, might Ire deducible from one or other of those principles in the constitution of the human mind which are... | |
| Mark Akenside - 1804 - 206 pages
...feels from the agreeable appearances of nature, and all the various entertainment we meet with eith'r in poetry, painting, music, or any of the elegant...human mind which are here established and explained. In executing this general plan, it -was necessary first of all to distinguish the Imagination from... | |
| Mark Akenside, Thomas Park - 1808 - 358 pages
...whatever our Imagination feels from the agreeable appearances of Nature, and all the various entertainment we meet with either in Poetry, Painting, Music, or...human mind, which are here established and explained. In executing this general plan, it was necessary first of all to distinguish the Imagination from our... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1810 - 628 pages
...entertainment we meet with either in poetry, painting, music, or any of ike elegant arts, might he dtrtlucible from one or other of those principles in the constitution of the human mind, uhicli are here established and explained. In executing tiiis general plan, it was necessary first... | |
| Mark Akenside - 1818 - 216 pages
...whatever our imagination feels from the agreeable appearances of Nature, and all the various entertainment we meet with, either in poetry, painting, music,, or any of the elegant arts, which might be deducible from one or other of those principles in the constitution- of the human mind,... | |
| Mark Akenside - 1818 - 210 pages
...whatever our imagination feels from the agreeable appearances of Nature, and all the various entertainment we meet with, either in poetry, painting, music, or any of the elegant arts, which might be deducible from one or other of those principles in the constitution of the human mind,... | |
| 1833 - 540 pages
...also elected one of the physicians of St. Thomas's Hospital. He died June 23, 1770, aged fony-nine. His principal medical work is a treatise On Dysentery,...its poetical merits are considerable. Dr. Akenside proentirely to rewrite the poem ; but death interrupted him when he had only completed the first and... | |
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