Laocoon; Or The Limits of Poetry and PaintingJ. Ridgway & Sons., 1836 - 373 Seiten |
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Seite vi
... object of Lessing , on the contrary , is to indicate the features in which they differ , and to mark the boundary line which forms the limit of their respective territories . This object has been much facili- tated by the circumstance ...
... object of Lessing , on the contrary , is to indicate the features in which they differ , and to mark the boundary line which forms the limit of their respective territories . This object has been much facili- tated by the circumstance ...
Seite vii
... object must neces- sarily be a much slower process than the actual exhibition of the thing itself , in its real form ... objects , vii.
... object must neces- sarily be a much slower process than the actual exhibition of the thing itself , in its real form ... objects , vii.
Seite viii
... objects is , properly speaking , beyond the legitimate province of poetry , yet this art has the power , by means of a single well - chosen trait , operating on the ima ... object has been to show that , since the means of the two arts.
... objects is , properly speaking , beyond the legitimate province of poetry , yet this art has the power , by means of a single well - chosen trait , operating on the ima ... object has been to show that , since the means of the two arts.
Seite ix
... adequate idea can be formed from any detailed verbal description . On the same principle Lessing seems inclined to maintain that all delineations of visible objects should , as far as X possible , be avoided by the poet , or ix.
... adequate idea can be formed from any detailed verbal description . On the same principle Lessing seems inclined to maintain that all delineations of visible objects should , as far as X possible , be avoided by the poet , or ix.
Seite x
... objects , of such a nature as to be readily comprehended by the eye at once . On the other hand , the descriptions which seem to form an exception to the rule belong to a more extended sphere of vision , in which the Poet may , with ...
... objects , of such a nature as to be readily comprehended by the eye at once . On the other hand , the descriptions which seem to form an exception to the rule belong to a more extended sphere of vision , in which the Poet may , with ...
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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