He has only felt, during the whole course of his life; and in this respect, his sensibility rises to a pitch beyond what I have seen any example of: but it still gives him a more acute feeling of pain than of pleasure. He is like a man who were stript... Macmillan's Magazine - Página 449editado por - 1899Visualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| 1911 - 518 páginas
...but it still gives him a more acute feeling of pain than of pleasure. He ia like a man who was stript not only of his clothes, but of his skin, and turned...to combat with the rude and boisterous elements.' His vivid internal life was such that when alone he never knew ennui. ' Seul je n'ai jamais connu 1'ennui,... | |
| 1821 - 488 páginas
...than of pleasure. He is like a man who were stript not only ofbis cloaths, but of his skin, and turn'd out in that situation to combat with the rude and boisterous Elements, such as perpetually disturb this lower World. I shall give you a remarkable instance of his turn of... | |
| John Hill Burton, David Hume - 1846 - 566 páginas
...it still gives him a more acute feeling of pain than of pleasure. He is like a man who were stript not only of his clothes, but of his skin, and turned...situation to combat with the rude and boisterous elements, such as perpetually disturb this lower world. I shall give you a remarkable instance of his turn of... | |
| 1846 - 614 páginas
...resentment at Rousseau's ingratitude. Hume himself has described him as ' like a man who was stript not only of his clothes but of his skin, and turned...to combat with the rude and boisterous elements,' such as perpetually disturb this lower world.' (vol. ii. p. 314.) In that morbid sensibility of his... | |
| 1846 - 604 páginas
...resentment at Rousseau's ingratitude. Hume himself has described him as ' like a man who was stript not only of his clothes but of his skin, and turned...to combat with the rude and boisterous elements,' such as perpetually disturb this lower world.' (vol. ii. p. 314.) In that morbid sensibility of his... | |
| Charles Beard - 1873 - 478 páginas
...I have seen any example of. ... He is like a man who was stript not only of his clothes, but of bis skin, and turned out in that situation to combat with the rude and boisterous elements." -Morley, II. 299. pathy from a later to an earlier stage of emotion ; and so Rousseau in retrospect... | |
| John Morley (visct.) - 1873 - 370 páginas
...but it still gives him a more acute feeling of pain than of pleasure. He is like a man who was stript not only of his clothes, but of his skin, and turned...to combat with the rude and boisterous elements.' l A morbid affective state of this kind and of such a degree of intensity, was the sure antecedent... | |
| 1873 - 654 páginas
...I have seen any example of. ... He is like a man who was stript not only of his clothes, but of bis skin, and turned out in that situation to combat with the rude and boisterous elements." -Morley, II. 299. pathy from a later to an earlier stage of emotion ; and so Rousseau in retrospect... | |
| 1877 - 1146 páginas
...what I have seen any example of: but it still gives him a more acute feeling of pain than of pleasure. He is like a man who was stripped not only of his...to combat with the rude and boisterous elements."* And Rousseau's analysis of his own " effeminate but indomitable character " is very much to the same... | |
| George Sylvester Morris - 1880 - 510 páginas
...common between the morbidly sensitive temperament of Rousseau, whom Hume compared to a man " stript not only of his clothes but of his skin, and turned...situation to combat with the rude and boisterous elements, such as perpetually disturb this lower world," and the phlegmatic, even-tempered good-nature and practical... | |
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