Biographia Literaria, 第 2 卷 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 38 筆
第 114 頁
To form an idea of a thing's becoming nothing ; or of nothing becoming a thing ; is to impossible to all finite beings alike , of whatever age , and however educated or uneducated . Thus it is with splendid paradoxes in general .
To form an idea of a thing's becoming nothing ; or of nothing becoming a thing ; is to impossible to all finite beings alike , of whatever age , and however educated or uneducated . Thus it is with splendid paradoxes in general .
第 224 頁
... by being led to refer dis- 10 criminatingly to its own experience , has become conscious that all objects of mere desire constitute an interest ( i.e. aliquid quod est inter hoc et aliud , or that which is between the agent and his ...
... by being led to refer dis- 10 criminatingly to its own experience , has become conscious that all objects of mere desire constitute an interest ( i.e. aliquid quod est inter hoc et aliud , or that which is between the agent and his ...
第 231 頁
In the second sense , we convey by the word agreeable , that the thing has by force of habit ( thence called a second nature ) been made to agree with us ; or that it has become agreeable to us by its recalling to our minds some one or ...
In the second sense , we convey by the word agreeable , that the thing has by force of habit ( thence called a second nature ) been made to agree with us ; or that it has become agreeable to us by its recalling to our minds some one or ...
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admiration answer appear attention beauty become Biog called cause character Coleridge Coleridge's common composed connected consists critic definition delight distinction edition effect English equally Essay excellence excitement existence expression feeling former genius German give greater hand heart human images imagination imitation immediate individual instance interest Italy kind language least less Letters light lines living look means metre Milton mind moral nature never object observed once opinion original PAGE passage passed passion perhaps person philosopher pleasure poem poet poetic poetry possible Preface present principle produced prose published reader reason reference respect Review seems sense Shakespeare sound speaking spirit stanza style taste thing thought tion true truth universal whole Wordsworth writings written