| Joseph Addison - 1856 - 1090 páginas
...we call up their ideas into our minds by paintings, statues, descriptions, or any the like occasion. We cannot, indeed, have a ' single image in the fancy...not make its first entrance -'• through the sight ; but we have the power of retaining, altering, and compounding those images, which we have once received,... | |
| Richard Green Parker - 1857 - 464 páginas
...of calling up ideas by occasions. The common phrase, any such means, would have been more natural. " We cannot indeed have a single image in the fancy,...did not make its first entrance through the sight ; but we have the power of retaining, altering, and compoundmg those images which we have once received,... | |
| Joseph Catafago - 1858 - 368 páginas
...view, or when we call up their ideas by paintings, statues, descriptions, or any the like occasion. We cannot, indeed, have a single image in the fancy,...did not make its first entrance through the sight ; but we have the power of retaining, altering, and compounding those images which we have once received,... | |
| 1858 - 770 páginas
...ideas; so that by the pleasures of imagination I mean such as arise from visible obj ects. We cannot have a single image in the fancy that did not make its first entrance through the sight." Meanwhile, imagination had come to be employed as a term of contempt. Bishop Butler, in the Analogy,... | |
| 1858 - 798 páginas
...ideas; so that by the pleasures of imagination I mean such as arise from visible objecte. We cannot have a single image in the fancy that did not make its first entrance through the sight." Meanwhile, imagination had come to be employed as a term of contempt Bishop Butler, in the Analogy,... | |
| Marcius Willson - 1862 - 558 páginas
...their ideas in our minds by paintings, statues, descriptions, or other similar means. 11. " We can not, indeed, have a single image in the fancy that did not make its first entrance through the sight ; but we have the power of retaining, altering, and compounding those images which we have once received,... | |
| Joseph Addison, P.P. - London. - Spectator, 1711-14 - 1864 - 344 páginas
...we call up their ideas into our minds by painting, statues, descriptions, or any the like occasion. We cannot, indeed, have a single image in the fancy...did not make its first entrance through the sight ; but we have the power of retaining, altering, and compounding those images which we have once received... | |
| Enaeas Sweetland Dallas - 1866 - 362 páginas
...we call up their ideas to our mind, by paintings, statues, descriptions, or any the like occasions. We cannot, indeed, have a single image in the fancy that did not make its first entrance CHAPTER through the sight." Addison, and the writers ^'"' who follow in his wake, are so far true to... | |
| Alexander Bain - 1867 - 352 páginas
...balance than ' them ' and ' their ideas.' 6. The next sentence is not well connected with the previous. " We cannot (indeed) have a single image in the fancy...did "not make its first entrance through the sight; but (we have) " ' what we have is ' the power of retaining, altering, and (com" pounding those images,... | |
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