Leigh Hunt's Dramatic Criticism, 1808-1831, Volume 10Columbia University Press, 1949 - 347 pages |
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Page 80
... passion in the most refined love ; perhaps indeed that passion becomes the more intense in proportion to the admixture of intellectual qualities , and to the taste for enjoyment of every kind , which one partly may suppose the other to ...
... passion in the most refined love ; perhaps indeed that passion becomes the more intense in proportion to the admixture of intellectual qualities , and to the taste for enjoyment of every kind , which one partly may suppose the other to ...
Page 81
... passion , then , we conceive , the dispute becomes only a mat- ter of words , and that while he applies the term love to that animal passion which nobody denies to exist in the most re- fined attachments , we apply it to the mixture of ...
... passion , then , we conceive , the dispute becomes only a mat- ter of words , and that while he applies the term love to that animal passion which nobody denies to exist in the most re- fined attachments , we apply it to the mixture of ...
Page 306
... passion like Juliet ; full of simplicity , softness , and humility , and so innocent , that she can hardly form to herself an idea of the possibility of infidelity , she seems calculated to make the most yielding and tenderest of wives ...
... passion like Juliet ; full of simplicity , softness , and humility , and so innocent , that she can hardly form to herself an idea of the possibility of infidelity , she seems calculated to make the most yielding and tenderest of wives ...
Contents
CRITICISM ON SHAKSPEARES MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING | 3 |
MR YOUNGS MERITS CONSIDERED | 21 |
THE CONSCIOUS LOVERS | 35 |
Copyright | |
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