It is in counterfeit passion, in the mimical situations of novels, or in poems that are efforts of ingenuity and no ebullitions of absolute unsimulated feeling, that female writers endeavour to sustain their own jaded sensibility, or to reinforce the... Writings - Página 76por Thomas De Quincey - 1864Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Thomas De Quincey - 1876 - 590 páginas
...situations are always pledges of a real natural language. It is in counterfeit passion, in tho mimical situations of novels, or in poems that are efforts...practise vagaries of caprice in the management of her Another tongue ; strength of real feeling shuts out all temptation to the affectation of false feeling.... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1890 - 472 páginas
...efforts of ingenuity and no ebullitions of absolute unsimulated feeling, that female writers endeavour to sustain their own jaded sensibility, or to reinforce...shuts out all temptation to the affectation of false feelingf""! Hence-tte purity of the female Byzantine Greek. Such caprices as they might have took some... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1893 - 294 páginas
...efforts of ingenuity and no ebullitions of absolute unsimulated feeling, that female writers endeavour to sustain their own jaded sensibility, or to reinforce...all temptation to the affectation of false feeling. 11. Hence the purity of the female Byzantine Greek. Such caprices as they might have took some other... | |
| William Tenney Brewster - 1905 - 390 páginas
...efforts of ingenuity and no ebullitions of absolute unsimulated feeling, that female writers endeavour to sustain their own jaded sensibility, or to reinforce...all temptation to the affectation of false feeling. 11. Hence the purity of the female Byzantine Greek. Such caprices as they might have took some other... | |
| William Tenney Brewster - 1905 - 394 páginas
...efforts of ingenuity and no ebullitions of absolute unsimulated feeling, that female writers endeavour to sustain their own jaded sensibility, or to reinforce...the management of her mother tongue : strength of reaUeeling shuts out all temptation to the affectation of falssJfecling. 11. Hence the purity of the... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1893 - 292 páginas
...efforts of ingenuity and no ebullitions of absolute unsimulated feeling, that female writers endeavour to sustain their own jaded sensibility, or to reinforce...all temptation to the affectation of false feeling. 11. Hence the purity of the female Byzantine Greek. Such caprices as they might have took some other... | |
| Daniel Sanjiv Roberts - 2000 - 338 páginas
...efforts of ingenuity, and no ebullitions of absolute unsimulated feeling, that female writers endeavour to sustain their own jaded sensibility, or to reinforce...interest of their readers by extravagances of language. If style was a development of the hustings, as De Quincey claimed, this has a curiously warped logical... | |
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