Essays Aesthetical and Philosophical; Including the Dissertation on the "Connexion Between the Animal and Spiritual in Man." Newly Translated from the GermanG. Bell, 1875 - 435 pages |
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Page 290
... poet deals with the highest interests of the heart - nature and the ideal . Accordingly it is a hard matter for him not to violate the poetic form in pathetic satire , because this form consists in the liberty of move- ment ; and in ...
... poet deals with the highest interests of the heart - nature and the ideal . Accordingly it is a hard matter for him not to violate the poetic form in pathetic satire , because this form consists in the liberty of move- ment ; and in ...
Page 298
... poetic dignity . The elegiac poet seeks nature , but nature as an idea , and in a degree of perfection that it has ... poetic value , since their object is ideal ; only he does not know how to treat it in a poetic fashion . No doubt his ...
... poetic dignity . The elegiac poet seeks nature , but nature as an idea , and in a degree of perfection that it has ... poetic value , since their object is ideal ; only he does not know how to treat it in a poetic fashion . No doubt his ...
Page 358
... poetic end , that is to say , it represents an action to move us , and to charm our souls by the medium of this emotion . If , therefore , a matter being given , tragedy treats it conformably with this poetic end which is proper to it ...
... poetic end , that is to say , it represents an action to move us , and to charm our souls by the medium of this emotion . If , therefore , a matter being given , tragedy treats it conformably with this poetic end which is proper to it ...
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Common terms and phrases
absolute Accordingly action activity æsthetic affection animal appearance beauty become character conception condition consequently contrary COVENT GARDEN determined dignity duty Edition Engravings eternal existence experience expression faculty Fcap feeling force freedom genius GEORGE BELL GEORGE CRUIKSHANK give Göthe grace Greek happiness harmony heart highest human nature idea ideal Iliad imagination impression impulsion inclination infinite instinct judgment Julius Cæsar kind Klopstock Laocoon liberty limits manifest manner matter means Memoir mind moral law movements necessary necessity never noble object ourselves P. L. SIMMONDS pain passion perfection person phænomena phænomenon philosophical physical play pleasure poetic poetry Portrait present principle pure racter Raphael reality reason relation satisfy Schiller seek sensation sensuous nature sentimental poet simplicity soul sphere spirit STANDARD LIBRARY sublime suffering taste things thought tion tragedy tragic Translated true truth understanding unity virtue vols whole Woodcuts world of sense