Laocoon; Or The Limits of Poetry and PaintingJ. Ridgway & Sons., 1836 - 373 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 60
Seite ix
... gives him the advantage over poetry , and the poet , on the other hand , should employ his genius in that direction in which the painter's power fails . In obedience to this rule , the judicious painter avoids the imaginative effects ...
... gives him the advantage over poetry , and the poet , on the other hand , should employ his genius in that direction in which the painter's power fails . In obedience to this rule , the judicious painter avoids the imaginative effects ...
Seite xix
... give the name itself place on my title - page . Other little digres- sions on several points connected with ancient art , contribute less to the general object in view , and are left where they stand only because I have no hope of ever ...
... give the name itself place on my title - page . Other little digres- sions on several points connected with ancient art , contribute less to the general object in view , and are left where they stand only because I have no hope of ever ...
Seite 2
... give utterance to a terrific shriek ; the aperture of the mouth does not admit of this . The sound he breathes is rather , as Sadoleto describes it , the stifled sigh of anguish . Bodily pain and grandeur of soul are divided with equal ...
... give utterance to a terrific shriek ; the aperture of the mouth does not admit of this . The sound he breathes is rather , as Sadoleto describes it , the stifled sigh of anguish . Bodily pain and grandeur of soul are divided with equal ...
Seite 5
... give for my opinion . The piteous lamentations , groans , broken ejacula- tions , and entire lines filled with interjectional exclamations , which occur so frequently in this act , and which must be delivered with long pauses and ...
... give for my opinion . The piteous lamentations , groans , broken ejacula- tions , and entire lines filled with interjectional exclamations , which occur so frequently in this act , and which must be delivered with long pauses and ...
Seite 11
... give utterance to the expression of pain is perfectly compatible , at least according to the notions of the ancient Greeks , with grandeur of soul - it follows that it could not have been from the fear of diminishing this elevation of ...
... give utterance to the expression of pain is perfectly compatible , at least according to the notions of the ancient Greeks , with grandeur of soul - it follows that it could not have been from the fear of diminishing this elevation of ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Laocoon; Or the Limits of Poetry and Painting Gotthold Ephraim Lessing,William Ross Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2015 |
Laocoon; Or the Limits of Poetry and Painting Gotthold Ephraim Lessing,William Ross Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2018 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Achilles acquainted action admiration Æneid Æsop Agesander alluded ancient artists appear artifice Athenodorus attributes Bacchus bodily body Caylus Chabrias character circumstance Comte de Caylus contrary corporeal beauty Craterus deformity degree delineation describes disgust divine effect employed end of volume Eumolpus example excite executed exhibited expression eyes fancy feeling figure follow former Furies give goddess Greek hand Harduin heroes Homer idea Iliad imagination imitation inscription instance Laocoon latter less Lysippus Mars means Meleager nature never Note object observed opinion Ovid pain painter painting passage Pausanias perceive perfect Phidias Philoctetes pictorial Pliny poem poet poetic pictures poetry Polydectes Polydorus Polygnotus produce Pythodorus reference regard render represented ridiculous Roman says sceptre sculptor sect SECTION sensations shield shrieks sight single Sophocles Spence statue sufferings suppose taste temple Thersites thing tion traits Translator true Venus Vesta Virgil visible whole Winkelmann words δε