Contributions to the Edinburgh Review, Том 2Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans, 1846 |
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Сторінка 26
... tender impressions . We feel a harshness and gloom in his genius , even while we are compelled to admire its force and originality . " The peculiar choice of his subjects was , at all events , happy and commendable , as far as it ...
... tender impressions . We feel a harshness and gloom in his genius , even while we are compelled to admire its force and originality . " The peculiar choice of his subjects was , at all events , happy and commendable , as far as it ...
Сторінка 56
... tender and afflicting pathetic , he appears to us occasionally to be second only to him who has never yet had an equal . The greater part of every play , however , is bad ; and there is not one which does not contain faults sufficient ...
... tender and afflicting pathetic , he appears to us occasionally to be second only to him who has never yet had an equal . The greater part of every play , however , is bad ; and there is not one which does not contain faults sufficient ...
Сторінка 93
... tender , lest they should be laughed at for puling and whining ; nor discursive nor fanciful like their great predecessors , under pain of being held out to derision , as ingenious gentlemen who have dreamed that the gods have made them ...
... tender , lest they should be laughed at for puling and whining ; nor discursive nor fanciful like their great predecessors , under pain of being held out to derision , as ingenious gentlemen who have dreamed that the gods have made them ...
Сторінка 123
... tender or generous affection . The true antidote to such seductive or revolting views of human nature , is to turn to the scenes of its nobleness and attraction ; and to reconcile ourselves again to our kind , by listening to the ...
... tender or generous affection . The true antidote to such seductive or revolting views of human nature , is to turn to the scenes of its nobleness and attraction ; and to reconcile ourselves again to our kind , by listening to the ...
Сторінка 126
... tender pity , or deep respect , for those very individuals or classes of persons who seemed at first to be brought on the stage for our mere sport and amusement thus making the ludicrous itself subser- vient to the cause of benevolence ...
... tender pity , or deep respect , for those very individuals or classes of persons who seemed at first to be brought on the stage for our mere sport and amusement thus making the ludicrous itself subser- vient to the cause of benevolence ...
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admiration Adosinda appear Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson breast breath Burns CAMPBELL'S character Crabbe CRABBE'S death delight diction earth effect emotions enchantments English English poetry exquisite eyes fair fancy father faults feelings genius GEORGE CRABBE give Goth grace hand hath hear heart heaven honour human humble images imagination interest lady less light living Loch Katrine lofty look Lord Byron lov'd lover Macbeth merit mind minstrel misanthropy moral mountain Myrrha nature never o'er once original pain passages passion pathos peculiar Pelayo perhaps picture pleasure poem poet poetical poetry racter readers Roderick Sard SARDANAPALUS scarcely scene Scott seem'd sentiments Shakespeare Siverian smile song soul specimen spirit story striking style sweet sympathy taste tears tenderness thee THEODRIC thing thou thought tion tone truth Twas verses vulgar whole wild WITCH OF EDMONTON writers youth