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The Pleasures of the Imagination

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The first book defines the powers of imagination and discusses the various kinds of pleasure to be derived from the perception of beauty; the second distinguishes works of imagination from philosophy; the third describes the pleasure to be found in the study of man, the sources of ridicule, the
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complains that "his tone is too high-pitched; his ideas are too much in the air; they do not nourish themselves in the common heart, the common life of man."
101:. These specific papers differed from the rest in that they were non-narrative and philosophical, and contained less obvious social commentary. 111: 53: 42:
operations of the mind, in producing works of imagination, and the influence of imagination on morals. The ideas were largely borrowed from
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praised the blank verse of the poems, but found fault with the long and complicated periods.
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Hart, Jeffrey (1959). "Akenside's Revision of the Pleasures of Imagination".
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Akenside got the idea for the poem during a visit to
244: 191:English Literature in Eighteenth Century 83: 245: 187: 144: 125:The Pleasures of Imagination. A Poem 97:papers numbered 411 through 421, by 13: 104: 14: 279: 89:The Pleasures of the Imagination 46:'s essays on the imagination in 18:The Pleasures of the Imagination 215: 181: 138: 67: 1: 131: 225:. Minnesota State University 223:"Joseph Addison (1672-1719)" 7: 36: 10: 284: 112:Pleasures of Imagination 120:, Nos. 411-421 (1712). 188:Sanyal, Lopa (2006). 29:, first published in 84:Similarly-named work 153:(1). JSTOR: 67–74. 21:is a long didactic 110:Addison, Joseph. 91:may also refer to 253:1744 poetry books 275: 235: 234: 232: 230: 219: 213: 212: 210: 208: 185: 179: 178: 142: 123:Akenside. Mark. 54:Lord Shaftesbury 283: 282: 278: 277: 276: 274: 273: 272: 243: 242: 239: 238: 228: 226: 221: 220: 216: 206: 204: 202: 186: 182: 143: 139: 134: 107: 105:Further reading 86: 70: 39: 12: 11: 5: 281: 271: 270: 265: 260: 255: 237: 236: 214: 201:978-8183561365 200: 180: 159:10.2307/460387 136: 135: 133: 130: 129: 128: 121: 106: 103: 99:Joseph Addison 85: 82: 69: 66: 62:Samuel Johnson 44:Joseph Addison 38: 35: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 280: 269: 266: 264: 263:British poems 261: 259: 256: 254: 251: 250: 248: 241: 224: 218: 203: 197: 193: 192: 184: 176: 172: 168: 164: 160: 156: 152: 148: 141: 137: 126: 122: 119: 118: 117:The Spectator 113: 109: 108: 102: 100: 96: 95: 94:The Spectator 90: 81: 79: 75: 65: 63: 59: 58:Edward Dowden 55: 51: 50: 49:The Spectator 45: 34: 32: 28: 27:Mark Akenside 24: 20: 19: 240: 227:. Retrieved 217: 205:. Retrieved 190: 183: 150: 146: 140: 115: 92: 88: 87: 71: 47: 40: 17: 16: 15: 268:Imagination 68:Inspiration 258:1744 poems 247:Categories 229:22 January 207:22 January 132:References 175:163320052 52:and from 37:Contents 127:(1744). 114:, from 74:Morpeth 198:  173:  167:460387 165:  171:S2CID 163:JSTOR 231:2019 209:2019 196:ISBN 147:PMLA 78:1738 31:1744 23:poem 155:doi 76:in 25:by 249:: 169:. 161:. 151:74 149:. 80:. 56:. 33:. 233:. 211:. 177:. 157::

Index

poem
Mark Akenside
1744
Joseph Addison
The Spectator
Lord Shaftesbury
Edward Dowden
Samuel Johnson
Morpeth
1738
The Spectator
Joseph Addison
Pleasures of Imagination
The Spectator
The Pleasures of Imagination. A Poem
doi
10.2307/460387
JSTOR
460387
S2CID
163320052
English Literature in Eighteenth Century
ISBN
978-8183561365
"Joseph Addison (1672-1719)"
Categories
1744 poetry books
1744 poems
British poems
Imagination

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