Essays: Moral, Political and AestheticD. Appleton&Company, 1865 - 386 páginas |
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Página 10
... expression seems yet to have been enunciated . The maxims contained in works on composition and rhetoric , are presented in an unorganized form . Standing as isolated dogmas - as empirical gener- alizations , they are neither so clearly ...
... expression seems yet to have been enunciated . The maxims contained in works on composition and rhetoric , are presented in an unorganized form . Standing as isolated dogmas - as empirical gener- alizations , they are neither so clearly ...
Página 13
... expression - It is acid , must in the end give rise to the same thought as — It is sour ; but because the term acid was learnt later in life , and has not been so often followed by the thought symbolized , it does not so readily arouse ...
... expression - It is acid , must in the end give rise to the same thought as — It is sour ; but because the term acid was learnt later in life , and has not been so often followed by the thought symbolized , it does not so readily arouse ...
Página 14
... expressing strong feeling , the word which more especially implies that feeling may often with advantage be a many - syllabled or Latin one ; in the immense majority of cases , each word serving but as a step to the idea embodied by the ...
... expressing strong feeling , the word which more especially implies that feeling may often with advantage be a many - syllabled or Latin one ; in the immense majority of cases , each word serving but as a step to the idea embodied by the ...
Página 15
... expressions is clearly due to a saving of the effort required to translate words into thoughts . As we do not think in generals but in particu- lars - as , whenever any class of things is referred to , we represent it to ourselves by ...
... expressions is clearly due to a saving of the effort required to translate words into thoughts . As we do not think in generals but in particu- lars - as , whenever any class of things is referred to , we represent it to ourselves by ...
Página 16
... expression . They would expect those educated in the use of the opposite form to have an equal preference for that . And thus they would conclude that neither of these instinctive judgments LOCATION OF ADJECTIVES . 17 is of any worth ...
... expression . They would expect those educated in the use of the opposite form to have an equal preference for that . And thus they would conclude that neither of these instinctive judgments LOCATION OF ADJECTIVES . 17 is of any worth ...
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Términos y frases comunes
absolute morality Act of Parliament action advantage arrangement Bank Bank of England bankers become bills body capital carried cause cent citizens classes companies consequence consider constitution contract conviction Corn-Laws demand diminished directors dishonesties dividends effect efficient engineers English entail equitable established evils experience extension fact faculties force fulfil function further gained give greater habitually Hence Herbert Spencer House of Commons idea imply increased interests issue justice labour law of effect legislation less lines manufacturers means meet members of Parliament ment mental mercantile mind mode nature needful Obermair obtained officers organization Parliament political present principle prisoners produced profits proved question railway regulation representative government respect restraint scarcely secure sentence shareholders shares silk social SOCIAL STATICS society tences things thought tion trade true truth undertakings words zygomatic arches
Pasajes populares
Página 21 - The effect of giving priority to the complement of the predicate, as well as the predicate itself, is finely displayed in the opening of " Hyperion " : " Deep in the shady sadness of a vale Far sunken from the healthy
Página 20 - the bark's mast in the gale When rent are rigging, shrouds, and sail, It wavered 'mid the foes." Pursuing the principle yet further, it is obvious that for producing the greatest efiect, not only should the main divisions of a sentence observe this
Página 34 - troubled noise of the ocean when roll the waves on high ; as the last peal of the thunder of heaven ; such is noise of the battle." Except in the position of the verb in the first two
Página 9 - is doubtless true. Thus, too, is it with grammar. ' As Dr. Latham, condemning the usual school-drill in Lindley Murray, rightly remarks :—" Gross vulgarity is a fault to be prevented ; but the proper prevention is to be got from habit—not rules." Similarly, there can be little question that good composition is far less dependent upon
Página 179 - No person concerned in the management of any duties or taxes created since 1692, except the commissioners of the treasury, nor any of the officers following (viz., commissioners of prizes, transports, sick and wounded, wine licenses, navy, and victualling ; 8* secretaries and receivers of prizes ; comptrollers of the army accounts ; agents of regiments ; governors of plantations, and
Página 20 - theory. Similarly with respect to the conditions under which any fact is predicated. Observe in the following example the effect of putting them last : How immense would be the stimulus to progress, were the honour now given to wealth and title given exclusively to high achievements and intrinsic worth ! And then observe the superior
Página 47 - effect. And while his work presents to the reader that variety needful. to prevent continuous exertion of the same faculties, it will also answer to the description of all highly-organized products, both of man and of nature : it will be, not a series of like parts simply placed in juxtaposition, but one whole made up of unlike parts that are mutually dependent. II