We cannot 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, into all the Varieties of Picture and Vision... The British Essayists;: Spectator - الصفحة 131بواسطة Alexander Chalmers - 1808عرض كامل - لمحة عن هذا الكتاب
| Roswell Chamberlain Smith - 1857 - عدد الصفحات: 206
...received, into all the varieties of picture unu vision." It it rery proper to say, " alterin* anil compounding those images which we have once received, into all the varieties of picture and vision ;" but wo cannot with propriety •ay, " retaining them into all the varieties ;" and yet, according... | |
| Richard Green Parker - 1857 - عدد الصفحات: 464
...natural. " We cannot 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 compoundmg those images which we have once received, into all the varieties of picture and vision,... | |
| Richard Green Parker - 1858 - عدد الصفحات: 466
...this sentence there is an inaccuracy in syntax. It is proper to say, altering and compounding tjiase images which we have once received, into all the varieties of picture and vision. But we cannot with propriety say, retaining them into all the varieties ; yet the arrangement requires... | |
| Edward Young - 1917 - عدد الصفحات: 150
...like occasion. We cannot 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,...into all the varieties of picture and vision that are the most agreeable to the imagination; for by this faculty a man in a dungeon is capable of entertaining... | |
| Frederick Clarke Prescott - 1922 - عدد الصفحات: 354
...poetry." "We cannot, 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,...varieties of picture and vision that are most agreeable to'the imagination." The imagination thus "has something in it like creation; it bestows a kind of... | |
| Robert L. Montgomery - 2010 - عدد الصفحات: 229
...like occasion. We cannot 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,...into all the varieties of picture and vision that are the most agreeable to the imagination; for by this faculty a man in a dungeon is capable of entertaining... | |
| Edward Alan Bloom, Lillian D. Bloom - 1995 - عدد الصفحات: 508
...altering and compounding them into all the varieties of picture and vision;' or better perhaps thus: 'We have the power of retaining, altering, and compounding those images which we have once received; and of forming them into all the varieties of picture and vision. ' - The latter part of the sentence... | |
| Peter Gay - 1996 - عدد الصفحات: 756
..."We cannot indeed," he wrote, "have a single Image in the Fancy that did not make its first Entrance through the Sight; but we have the Power of retaining,...Picture and Vision that are most agreeable to the Imagination."1 The pleasures of the imagination are magnificent and almost infinitely various; Addison... | |
| Ronald Paulson - 1998 - عدد الصفحات: 292
...Swift's satire on our "Power of retaining, altering and compounding those Images [of the senses] , which we have once received, into all the varieties...Vision that are most agreeable to the Imagination" into praise. His version of the caged Quixote or the imprisoned madman of the "Digression concerning... | |
| Robin Dix - 2000 - عدد الصفحات: 306
...paradoxically involves a savage contraction.13 For Addison, it is by means of the imagination that "a Man in a Dungeon is capable of entertaining himself with Scenes and Landskips more beautiful than any that can be found in the whole Compass of Nature" (411, 3:537). The... | |
| |