From Enlightenment to Romanticism: Anthology, Part 2Ian L. Donnachie, Carmen Lavin This is the first of two anthologies designed to accompany the Open University course From Enlightenment to Romanticism, an interdisciplinary exploration of the changes and transitions in European culture between c. 1780 and 1830. The collection of extracts in this anthology provides primary sources on the death of the Old Regime, the Napoleonic phenomenon, slavery, religion and reform. Each selection is accompanied by a detailed introduction explaining the context and significance of the sources. Extracts in the anthology stimulate questions rather than provide reassuring answers, and offer vital insights into the major events, movements and personalities of the time. This volume provides an invaluable resource for all students of European culture in the period. A companion volume offers readings on industry and changing landscapes, new forms of knowledge, new conceptions of art and the artist, and the exotic and the Oriental. Book jacket. |
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Page 108
... principles of human nature , such , indeed , as cannot fail to produce a general conduct throughout society , totally unworthy of the character of rational beings . The first thus unhappily situated are the poor and the uneducated ...
... principles of human nature , such , indeed , as cannot fail to produce a general conduct throughout society , totally unworthy of the character of rational beings . The first thus unhappily situated are the poor and the uneducated ...
Page 122
... principles to practice was made under the most unfavourable circumstances . ( It may be supposed that this community ... principles is of far less importance than a clear and accurate account of the principles themselves , in order that ...
... principles to practice was made under the most unfavourable circumstances . ( It may be supposed that this community ... principles is of far less importance than a clear and accurate account of the principles themselves , in order that ...
Page 123
... principles of the world , by showing whence arise the various opinions , manners , vices , and virtues of mankind , and how the best or the worst of them may , with mathematical precision , be taught to the rising generation . Let it ...
... principles of the world , by showing whence arise the various opinions , manners , vices , and virtues of mankind , and how the best or the worst of them may , with mathematical precision , be taught to the rising generation . Let it ...
Contents
The Lake District 1 The Picturesque the Beautiful and the Sublime | 3 |
Thomas West extracts from A Guide to the Lakes in Cumberland | 14 |
William Gilpin extracts from Observations relative chiefly | 22 |
Copyright | |
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From Enlightenment to Romanticism: Anthology II Ian Donnachie,Carmen Lavin No preview available - 2004 |
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admiration ancient appear architecture artist August Wilhelm Schlegel Barker Fairley bodies British Library Canto CAROLINE cause character chemical chemistry chiefly to Picturesque Childe Childe Harold's Pilgrimage colour distance earth effect electricity England Essay Eugène Delacroix extracts Faust feelings Friedrich Schlegel give ground habits happiness hath heart hydrogen ideas imagination Jane Marcet knowledge labour lady Clonbrony Lakes of Cumberland landscape light living London Lord Byron means mind never Novalis o'er objects Observations Oxford particularly the Mountains passion Picturesque Beauty plates pleasure poem poet poetical poetry principles relative chiefly rocks romantic Röslein Samuel Taylor Coleridge scene Schlegel sentiments Soane Soane's society soul Source spirit sublime taste thee things Thomas Rowlandson thou thought tint tion tour trees University Press vale Waterloo Westmoreland whole wild William Combe William Gilpin's William Wordsworth Windermere wood