The Enlightenment and English Literature: Prose and Poetry of the Eighteenth Century, with Selected Modern Critical EssaysJohn L. Mahoney D. C. Heath, 1980 - 765 pages |
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Page 380
... body pro- duce such a distinct emotion of mind , and no other ; or why the body is at all affected by the mind , or the mind by the body . A little thought will show this to be impossible . But I conceive , if we can discover what ...
... body pro- duce such a distinct emotion of mind , and no other ; or why the body is at all affected by the mind , or the mind by the body . A little thought will show this to be impossible . But I conceive , if we can discover what ...
Page 538
... body always to move ; the perception of ideas being , as I conceive , to the soul , what motion is to the body : not its essence , but one of its operations ; and , therefore , though thinking be supposed never so much the proper action ...
... body always to move ; the perception of ideas being , as I conceive , to the soul , what motion is to the body : not its essence , but one of its operations ; and , therefore , though thinking be supposed never so much the proper action ...
Page 546
... bodies , caused by the corpuscles of any other body , it is easy to be understood that if that motion be greater in one hand than in the other , if a body be applied to the two hands , which has in its minute particles a greater motion ...
... bodies , caused by the corpuscles of any other body , it is easy to be understood that if that motion be greater in one hand than in the other , if a body be applied to the two hands , which has in its minute particles a greater motion ...
Contents
Mark Akenside | 10 |
Alexander Pope | 15 |
from THE DUNCIAD | 98 |
Copyright | |
33 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
ancient appear beauty better body called cause common considered continued court critics death desire effect English equal eyes fair fall fear feel follow force give hand happy head heart Heaven hope human ideas imagination Italy John Johnson kind king knowledge laws learning leave less light live look Lord lost mankind manner means mind moral nature never o'er object observed once opinion pain pass passions perhaps person pleased pleasure poem poet poetry Pope praise present pride prince principle produce reader reason rest rise round rules seems sense sometimes soul spirit sure Swift tell things thou thought tion true truth turn virtue whole wind write