Literary Studies, Volumen1Longmans, Green, 1879 |
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Página 127
... experience ; but for art on a certain scale , the two must concur . Out of nothing , nothing can be created . Some ... experience . To a great experience one thing is essential , an experi- encing nature . It is not enough to have ...
... experience ; but for art on a certain scale , the two must concur . Out of nothing , nothing can be created . Some ... experience . To a great experience one thing is essential , an experi- encing nature . It is not enough to have ...
Página 142
... experience of men , which was common both to Goethe and to Scott , but also that he agrees with the latter rather than with the former in the kind and species of that experience . He was not merely with men , but of men ; he was not a ...
... experience of men , which was common both to Goethe and to Scott , but also that he agrees with the latter rather than with the former in the kind and species of that experience . He was not merely with men , but of men ; he was not a ...
Página 369
... experience by observation which has contributed in the main to what little public utility I have since been to my country . During these few years I became acquainted - well acquainted - with the middle classes of this country . I also ...
... experience by observation which has contributed in the main to what little public utility I have since been to my country . During these few years I became acquainted - well acquainted - with the middle classes of this country . I also ...
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abstract Bagehot beauty believe called certainly character civilisation Coleridge common Constitution Corn Laws coup d'état course Cowper defect delineation described doubt Economist Edinburgh Review England English essay excellence excitement existence expression fact Falstaff fancy father fear feel France French genius Government habit Hartley Hartley Coleridge Hawick House of Commons human idea imagination India instinct intellectual kind labour Lady Mary least letters literary lived Lord Lord Eldon Lord Macaulay Louis Napoleon ment Milton mind moral nation nature never object observe opinion pain Paradise Lost passions peculiar Percy Bysshe Shelley perhaps persons pleasure poems poet poetry political principle question remarkable Rydal Water seems sense Shakespeare Shelley singular society sort speak speculative Sydney Smith talk theory things thou thought tion truth Whigs whole Wilson wish words Wortley writing young youth