| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1834 - 594 páginas
...sense of the beautiful, an escape from many dangers and disturbances. The appetite for the beautiful in such men must be fed, and human beauty is a diet...human pleasures, the most exempt from correlative pain. It has no connexion of its own creating with any intemperance, sensual, sentimental, or intellectual.... | |
| 1834 - 864 páginas
...sense of the beautiful, an escape from many dangers and disturbances. The appetite for the beautiful in such men must be fed, and human beauty is a diet...human pleasures, the most exempt from correlative pain. It has no connexion of its own creating with any intemperance, sensual, sentimental, or intellectual.... | |
| Johnstone - 1840 - 350 páginas
...sense of the beautiful an escape from many dangers and disturbances. The appetite for the beautiful in such men must be fed ; and human beauty is a diet...frequent vicissitudes of feeling at all events, and in all probability to the exciteB ment of bitter and turbulent passions. The love and admiration of nature... | |
| Sir Henry Taylor - 1849 - 322 páginas
...sense of the beautiful, an escape from many dangers and disturbances. The appetite for the beautiful in such men must be fed, and human beauty is a diet...human pleasures, the most exempt from correlative pain. It has no connexion of its own creating with any intemperance, sensual, sentimental, or intellectual.... | |
| Thomas Ballantyne - 1870 - 256 páginas
...sense of the beautiful, an escape from many dangers and disturbances. The appetite for the beautiful in such men must be fed ; and human beauty is a diet...pleasures, the most exempt from correlative pains. TAYLOR'S Notes from Books. HAPPY is he who lives to understand, Not human nature only, but explores... | |
| Sir Henry Taylor - 1878 - 378 páginas
...sense of the beautiful, an escape from many dangers and disturbances. The appetite for the beautiful in such men must be fed, and human beauty is a diet which leads to excessive stimulation, frequent * Shakespeare's Sonnets. vicissitudes of feeling at all events, and in every probability to the excitement... | |
| |