| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1818 - 390 sayfa
...all Method, that is not purely accidental. Hence the nearer the things and inciVOL. III. L 145 dents in time and place, the more distant, disjointed, and...narration : and this from the want of a staple, or starting-post, in the narrator himself; from the absence of the leading Thought, which, borrowing a... | |
| Nathan Drake - 1828 - 534 sayfa
...and unreflecting talker overlooks all mental relations, and consequently precludes all method that is not purely accidental. Hence, — the nearer the...will they appear in his narration; and this from the absence of any leading thought in the narrator's own mind. On the contrary , where the habit of method.... | |
| Nathan Drake - 1828 - 520 sayfa
...and unreflecting talker overlooks all mental relations, and consequently precludes all method that is not purely accidental. Hence,—• the nearer...will they appear in his narration; and this from the absence of any leading thought in the narrator's own mind. On the contrary, where the habit of method... | |
| 1828 - 442 sayfa
...and unreflecting talker overlooks all mental relations, and consequently precludes all method that is not purely accidental. Hence, — the nearer the...will they appear in his narration ; and this from the absence of any leading thought in the narrator's own mind. On the contrary, where the habit of method... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1837 - 372 sayfa
...that other relation, in which they are likewise to be placed to the apprehension and sympathies of his hearers. His discourse appears like soliloquy...narration : and this from the want of a staple, or starting-post, in the narrator himself ; from the absence of the leading thought, which, borrowing... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1837 - 374 sayfa
...to the apprehension and sympathies of his hearers. His discourse appears like soliloquy in/ termixed with dialogue. But the uneducated and unreflecting...narration : and this from the want of a staple, or starting-post, in the narrator himself; from the absence of the leading thought, which, borrowing a... | |
| Encyclopaedia - 1849 - 112 sayfa
...and unreflecting talker overlooks all mental relations, and consequently precludes all Method that is not purely accidental. Hence, the nearer the things...will they appear in his narration : and this from the absence of any leading thought in the narrator's own mind. On the contrary, where the habit of Method... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1853 - 566 sayfa
...that other relation, in which they are likewise to be placed to the apprehension and sympathies of his hearers. His discourse appears like soliloquy...narration : and this from the want of a staple, or starting-post, in the narrator himself; from the absence of the leading thought, which, borrowing a... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1853 - 560 sayfa
...that other relation, in which they are likewise to be placed to the apprehension and sympathies of his hearers. His discourse appears like soliloquy...narration : and this from the want of a staple, or starting-post, in the narrator himself; from the absence of the leading thought, which, borrowing a... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 1854 - 568 sayfa
...that other relation, in which they are likewise to be placed to the apprehension and sympathies of his hearers. His discourse appears like soliloquy...narration : and this from the want of a staple, or starting-post, in the narrator himself; from the absence of the leading thought, which, borrowing a... | |
| |