| Cassell, ltd - 1876 - 470 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... | |
| Mark Akenside - 1878 - 792 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 elegunt arts, might be de.iucible from one or other of those principles in the con.ititulion of the... | |
| Mark Akenside - 1880 - 792 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, might he ' deducible from one or other of those principles in the constitution of the unman mind which are... | |
| Mark Akenside - 1880 - 792 pages
...poetry, painting, music, or any of the_elcgant arts, might be deduciblc from one or other of tho?e principles in the constitution of the human mind which are here established and In executing this general plan, it was necessary, first of all, to distinguish the imagination from... | |
| William John Courthope - 1905 - 528 pages
...our imagination feels from the agreeable appearances of nature, and all the various entertainments we meet with, either in poetry, painting, music, or...human mind which are here established and explained. It is a significant fact that, in his later years, Akenside's sense of what was poetical in his subject... | |
| Paul Oskar Kristeller - 1990 - 288 pages
...and poetry are listed as imitative arts, and the poem is said to cover "all the various entertainment we meet with, either in poetry, painting, music, or any of the elegant arts" (p. i). In the general argument added to the edition of 1757, the pleasures of imagination are said... | |
| Mark Akenside - 1996 - 616 pages
...nature, and all the various entertainment we meet with either in poetry, painting, music, or any [30] of the elegant arts, might be deducible from one or...the constitution of the human mind, which are here establish'd and explain'd. In executing this general plan, it was necessary first of all to distinguish... | |
| P. Oskar Kristeller - 1998 - 308 pages
...sono elencate come arti imitative, e della poesia si dice che copre «all the various entertainment we meet with, either in poetry, painting, music, or any of the elegant arts» (p. 1). Nella trattazione generaIe aggiunta all'edizione del 1757, i piaceri dell'immaginazione procedono,... | |
| Robin Dix - 2006 - 426 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." 2 1 . On the development of the aesthetic categories, see Walter J. Hippie, Jr., The Beautiful, the... | |
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