The World's Best Essays, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, Volumen9David Josiah Brewer, Edward Archibald Allen, William Schuyler F.P. Kaiser, 1900 - 4190 páginas |
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Página 3354
... appearance of things is the work of man , and a soul that takes pleasure in appearance does not take pleas- ure in what it receives , but in what it makes . It is self - evident that I am speaking of æsthetical evidence different from ...
... appearance of things is the work of man , and a soul that takes pleasure in appearance does not take pleas- ure in what it receives , but in what it makes . It is self - evident that I am speaking of æsthetical evidence different from ...
Página 3356
... appearance is æsthetical . Directly it apes reality or needs reality for effect , it is nothing more than a vile ... appearance , she no longer pleases the pure æsthetic feeling . In the painting , life must only attract as an appearance ...
... appearance is æsthetical . Directly it apes reality or needs reality for effect , it is nothing more than a vile ... appearance , she no longer pleases the pure æsthetic feeling . In the painting , life must only attract as an appearance ...
Página 3357
... appearance ; therefore he can only give a value to appearance by truth . The second lacks reality , and wishes to replace it by appearance . Nothing is more common than to hear depreciators of the times utter the paltry complaint that ...
... appearance ; therefore he can only give a value to appearance by truth . The second lacks reality , and wishes to replace it by appearance . Nothing is more common than to hear depreciators of the times utter the paltry complaint that ...
Contenido
VOLUME IX | 3261 |
ROUSSEAU JEAN JACQUES 17121778 | 3275 |
RUSKIN JOHN 18191900 | 3285 |
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Términos y frases comunes
actions admiration Æsir æsthetic affection Ancients appearance beauty become better Bifröst born called character Chesterfield clouds coffeehouse Complete death Demosthenes divine earth English essays evil existence eyes father feeling friends genius Geri and Freki give Greek Gylfi hand happy hath heart heaven honor human humor Hvergelmir idea imagination Isaac Bickerstaff Italian judgment kind knowledge labor laws less liberty literature live look Lord Lord Chesterfield Madame Madame de Staël Madame Roland manner matter means ment mind modern Montesquieu moral nature never Norns observe ourselves passion perfect perhaps person Petrarch philosophy pleasure poet poetry political produced reason seems sense sentiments Socrates soul speak spirit Tatler things thou thought Tintoretto tion Tristram Shandy true truth verse vibrations virtue Voltaire Völuspá whole words writing Younger Edda