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" I have been told by a physician of the first eminence, that music and novels have done more to produce the sickly countenances and nervous habits of our highly educated females, than any other causes that can be assigned. "
A Portraiture of Quakerism: As Taken from a View of the Moral Education ... - Página 129
por Thomas Clarkson - 1806
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London Saturday Journal..., Volumen3

1840 - 430 páginas
...consummation hardly, perhaps, to be desired by any true friend of mankind.— KfigM, V . MUSIC AND NOVELS* X have been told by a physician of the first eminence,...peculiar to novels, affects the organs of the body and relaxet the tone of the nerves ; In the same manner as the melting tones of music have been described...
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The British Friend, Volumen8

1850 - 654 páginas
...plays. They produce al-o the. same kind of mental stimulus, or the same powerful excitement of the mind. I have been told by a physician of the first eminence,...the sickly countenances and nervous habits of our highly educated females than any other causes that can lie assigned. The excels of stimulus on the...
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A Portraiture of the Christian Profession and Practice of the Society of ...

Thomas Clarkson - 1869 - 356 páginas
...plays. They produce also the same kind of mental stimulus, or the same powerful excitement of the mind. I have been told by a physician of the first eminence,...the sickly countenances and nervous habits of our highly educated females, than any other causes that can be assigned. The excess of stimulus on the...
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The Journal of Education, Volumen28;Volumen38

1906 - 888 páginas
...affect prejudicially the organs of the body ; and quotes a physician of the first eminence " as saying that " music and novels have done more to produce the sickly countenances and nervous habits of our highly educated females than any other causes that can be assigned." Shades of Jane Austen ! What would...
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Choreographing History

Susan Leigh Foster - 1995 - 280 páginas
...body." Novels "affect the organs of the body," "relax the tone of the nerves," and along with music have "done more to produce the sickly countenances and nervous habits of our highly educated females than anything else." We are getting closer to masturbatory disease." If we...
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Reading, Writing, and Romanticism: The Anxiety of Reception

Lucy Newlyn - 2000 - 432 páginas
...Quakerism (1806) associates the excesses of female sensibility with the torpor and debility of the addict: I have been told by a physician of the first eminence...the sickly countenances and nervous habits of our highly educated females, than any other causes that can be assigned. The excess of stimulus on the...
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Reading, Writing, and Romanticism: The Anxiety of Reception

Lucy Newlyn - 2003 - 436 páginas
...sensibility with the torpor and debility of the addict: I have been told by a physician of the fitst eminence that music and novels have done more to produce...the sickly countenances and nervous habits of our highly educated females, than any other causes that can be assigned. The excess of stimulus on the...
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The Perversity of Poetry: Romantic Ideology and the Popular Male Poet of Genius

Dino Franco Felluga - 2005 - 230 páginas
...which the NILE of female unhealthiness derives its origin" (1.4.45). Clarkson states with authority that "music and novels have done more to produce the sickly countenances and nervous habits of our highly educated females, than any other causes that can be assigned" (135n). Aligning the excessive...
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