The Director: A Weekly Literary Journal: Containing I. Essays, on Subjects of Literature, the Fine Arts and Manners. II. Bibliographana. Account of Rare and Curious Books and of the Book Sales in this Country, from the Close of the Seventeenth Century. III. Royal Institution. Analyses of the Lectures Delivered Weekly. IV. British Gallery. Description of the Principal Pictures Exhibited ... V. 1-2: Jan. 24-July 4, 1807, Band 2Thomas Frognall Dibdin, Frognall Longman, Hurst, 1807 |
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Seite 1
... soul . SIR , To the Director . THOSE persons certainly entertain a very mean and degrading opinion of the polite arts , who consider them merely as subservient to amusement , or at most to that cultivation of mind which , Emollit mores ...
... soul . SIR , To the Director . THOSE persons certainly entertain a very mean and degrading opinion of the polite arts , who consider them merely as subservient to amusement , or at most to that cultivation of mind which , Emollit mores ...
Seite 9
... soul , is , for that espe- cial reason , to be held in so much the higher estimation . No man felt the dignity of Music more than Handel ; since no man , pro- bably , ever felt to such a degree , the sublimity of its powers . He has ...
... soul , is , for that espe- cial reason , to be held in so much the higher estimation . No man felt the dignity of Music more than Handel ; since no man , pro- bably , ever felt to such a degree , the sublimity of its powers . He has ...
Seite 13
... soul , which he possessed , and well knew how to communicate ; but which cannot be received where the mind is not prepared . But , where any congenial dispositions exist , I have no doubt in saying , that no eloquence of an Augus- tine ...
... soul , which he possessed , and well knew how to communicate ; but which cannot be received where the mind is not prepared . But , where any congenial dispositions exist , I have no doubt in saying , that no eloquence of an Augus- tine ...
Seite 18
... Handel , it must be confessed , has attempted a kind of imitative ex- pression , by which he was now and then seduced ; the effect of which is not good . the sorrow of his own soul . The deep effect 18 On the Moral Effects of Music .
... Handel , it must be confessed , has attempted a kind of imitative ex- pression , by which he was now and then seduced ; the effect of which is not good . the sorrow of his own soul . The deep effect 18 On the Moral Effects of Music .
Seite 19
... soul . The deep effect of the recitative accompanied , 66 thy rebuke hath broken his heart , ” fol- lowed by the air , " Behold and see , if there be any sorrow like unto his sor- row , " is such as very seldom has or can be equalled ...
... soul . The deep effect of the recitative accompanied , 66 thy rebuke hath broken his heart , ” fol- lowed by the air , " Behold and see , if there be any sorrow like unto his sor- row , " is such as very seldom has or can be equalled ...
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