| Heinrich Gillardon - 1898 - 124 pages
...comprehensive order than the mere sympathy with individual passion; it is a sense of the existence of love in its most extended and sublime capacity, and of our own participation of its good and its glory; it is the great principle of the universe, which is there more condensed, but not less manifested... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1900 - 492 pages
...comprehensive order than the mere sympathy with individual passion; it is a sense of the existence of love in its most extended and sublime capacity,...individuality and mingle in the beauty of the whole." 87 : cv, 2. Voltaire, who lived at Ferney; and Gibbon, who finished his famous history at Lausanne... | |
| George Gordon Byron Baron Byron - 1922 - 584 pages
...(see extracts from a Journal, September 18, 1816, Lsfe, pp. 311, 312).] 3. [Bouveret, St. Gingolph.] our own participation of its good and of its glory : it is the great prmciple of the universe, which is there more condensed, but not less manifested ; and of which, though... | |
| Georg Morris Cohen Brandes - 1905 - 392 pages
...comprehensive order than the mere sympathy with individual passion ; it is a sense of the existence of love in its most extended and sublime capacity,...individuality, and mingle in the beauty of the whole." Shelley's influence is also traceable in the spirit scenes in Manfred, and very specially in the third... | |
| 1911 - 568 pages
...comprehensive order than the mere sympathy with individual passion ; it is a sense of the existence of love in its most extended and sublime capacity...manifested ; and of which, though knowing ourselves a pari, we lose our individuality , and mingle with the beauty of the whole.1 (Note zu Childe Harold... | |
| Frederika Macdonald - 1914 - 290 pages
...uplifted above the common world, and gladdened ' by the sense J as Byron said,1 ' of the existence of Love in its most extended and sublime capacity...our own participation of its good and of its glory.' 2 My contention is that it is this romantic 1 Cbilde Harold, note 9 to canto iii. 2 The author of Cbilde... | |
| Georg Morris Cohen Brandes - 1923 - 398 pages
...comprehensive order than the mere sympathy with individual passion ; it is a sense of the existence of love in its most extended and sublime capacity,...individuality, and mingle in the beauty of the whole." Shelley's influence is also traceable in the spirit scenes in Manfred, and very specially in the third... | |
| George Roy Elliott, Norman Foerster - 1923 - 864 pages
...peopled." Love, he adds, "the great principle of the universe, ... is there more condensed;" so that, "though knowing ourselves a part, we lose our individuality, and mingle in the beauty of the whole." (118.) 977. Lausanne! and Ferney!: abodes, respectively, of Gibbon and Voltaire. Note that Byron characterizes... | |
| Eugen Kölbing, Johannes Hoops, Reinald Hoops - 1911 - 510 pages
...comprehensive order than the mere sympathy with individual passion ; it is a sense of the existence of love in its most extended and sublime capacity...manifested ; and of which, though knowing ourselves a pari, we lose our individuality , and mingle with the beauty of the whole.' (Note zu Childe Harold... | |
| Philip W. Martin - 1982 - 268 pages
...comprehensive order than the mere sympathy with individual passion; it is a sense of the existence of love in its most extended and sublime capacity,...individuality, and mingle in the beauty of the whole. The use of 'mingle' suggests that what is being described here is an experience similar to that of... | |
| |