| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1799 - Počet stránok 442
...pride of fine feeling, the romantic error of amiable minds. Thole who who really poflefs fenfibility, ought early to be taught, that it is a dangerous quality,, which is continually extrafting the excefs of mifery, or delight, from every furrounding circumftance. And, fince, in our... | |
| 1820 - Počet stránok 344
...said he, do not indulge in the pride of fine feeling, the romantic error of amiable minds. Those who really possess sensibility ought early to be taught...evil is, I fear, more acute than our sense of good, we become the victims of our feelings, unless we can in some degree command them. I know you will say... | |
| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1824 - Počet stránok 820
...said he, do not indulge in the pride of fine feeling, the romantic error of amiable minds. Those who really possess sensibility ought early to be taught...evil is, I fear, more acute than our sense of good, we become the victims of our feelings, unless we can in some degree command them. I know you will say... | |
| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1826 - Počet stránok 836
...he, ' " do not indulge in the pride of fine feeling, the romantic error of amiable minds. Those «ho really possess sensibility ought early to be taught that it is a dangerous quality, which ie continually extracting the excess of misery or delight from every surrounding circumstance. And... | |
| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1859 - Počet stránok 654
...said he, do not indulge in the pride of fine feeling, the romantic error of amiable minds. Those who really possess sensibility, ought early to be taught...world, painful circumstances occur more frequently than pleasingont;s, and since our sense of evil is, I fear, more acute than our sense of good, we become... | |
| Walter Raleigh - 1894 - Počet stránok 346
...the forerunner of all those writers who cultivated sensibility,^ well denned by Mrs. Radcliffe as " a dangerous quality which is continually extracting...excess of misery or delight from every surrounding object," — the inaugurator of a century and a half of hyperaesthesia, A perfect chorus of applause... | |
| Léonie Villard - 1924 - Počet stránok 266
...Emily, do not indulge in the pride of fine feeling, the romantic error of amiable minds. Those who really possess sensibility ought early to be taught...excess of misery or delight from every surrounding * We find the orthodox view plainly set down in Mrs. Opie's AdeleineMowbray. " Her feelings of delicacy... | |
| Steven Bruhm - 1994 - Počet stránok 210
...all, ... do not indulge in the pride of fine feeling, the romantic error of amiable minds. Those, who really possess sensibility, ought early to be taught,...evil is, I fear, more acute than our sense of good, we become the victims of our feelings, unless we can in some degree command them. (79-80) While there... | |
| Anne Williams - 2009 - Počet stránok 325
...deathbed, "Do not indulge in the pride of fine feeling, the romantic error of amiable minds": Those, who really possess sensibility, ought early to be taught,...excess of misery, or delight, from every surrounding cirmcumstance. And, since, in our passage through this world, painful circumstances occur more frequently... | |
| Valeria Tinkler-Villani, Peter Davidson, Jane Stevenson - 1995 - Počet stránok 338
...But the concept is rich in meaning: as Ann Radcliffe put it in The Mysteries of Udolpho, sensibility "is a dangerous quality, which is continually extracting...or delight, from every surrounding circumstance". 2 It is this very excess — of joy or, much more usually according to Radcliffe and the other Gothic... | |
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