| Rowland Smith - 1855 - 552 páginas
...agreeable objects ; recalls from a distance the forms which are dear to us, and soothes our own grief by awakening our sympathy for others.. By its means...novelist, if he wish to awaken emotion or delight." Huet, Bishop of Avranches, was the first who wrote a regular and systematic treatise on the origin... | |
| Heliodorus (of Emesa.) - 1889 - 576 páginas
...recalls from a distance the forms which are dear to us, and soothes our own grief by awakening aur sympathy for others. By its means the recluse is placed...novelist, if he wish to awaken emotion or delight." Huet, Bishop of Avranches, was the first who wrote a regular and systematic treatise on the origin... | |
| Rowland Smith - 1889 - 556 páginas
...a distance the forms which are dear to us, and soothes our own grief by awakening crur sympathy fir others. By its means the recluse is placed in the...novelist, if he wish to awaken emotion or delight." Huet, Bishop of Avranches, was the first who wrote a regular and systematic treatise on the origin... | |
| 1893 - 564 páginas
...agreeable objects ; recalls from a distance the forms which are dear to us, and soothes our own grief by awakening our sympathy for others. By its means...novelist, if he wish to awaken emotion or delight." Huet, Bishop of Avranches, was the first who wrote a regular and systematic treatise on the origin... | |
| John Richetti, John Bender, Deirdre David, Michael Seidel - 1994 - 1094 páginas
...pleasures improve and uplift the reader, by taking him or her into an elevated social and emotive space: "The rude are refined by an introduction, as it were,...novelist if he wish to awaken emotion or delight." Having confirmed its beneficial effect, Dunlop can confirm the novel's rise from its earlier disreputable... | |
| William B. Warner - 1998 - 346 páginas
...argued to improve and uplift the reader, by taking him or her into an elevated social and emotive space: "The rude are refined by an introduction, as it were,...novelist if he wish to awaken emotion or delight" (xi-xii). Having affirmed its beneficent effects, Dunlop goes on to confirm the novel's rise from its... | |
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