From Enlightenment to Romanticism: Anthology, Part 1Ian L. Donnachie, Carmen Lavin Manchester University Press, 2003 - 307 pages This is the second 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 1780 and 1830. The collection of extracts in this anthology provides primary and secondary sources on changing landscapes, new forms of knowledge, new conceptions of art and the artist and the exotic and Oriential. 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 to the major events, movements and personalities of the time. |
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Page 38
... rest , from which I infer that neither rest nor motion is essential to it . But motion , since it is an action , is the effect of a cause of which rest is only the absence . Therefore , when nothing acts on matter , it does not move ...
... rest , from which I infer that neither rest nor motion is essential to it . But motion , since it is an action , is the effect of a cause of which rest is only the absence . Therefore , when nothing acts on matter , it does not move ...
Page 133
... rest , and said , that he would speak to their lord to get us clear , and desired that we should follow him ; we were then immediately divided into different parties , and drove after him . We were soon led out of the way which we knew ...
... rest , and said , that he would speak to their lord to get us clear , and desired that we should follow him ; we were then immediately divided into different parties , and drove after him . We were soon led out of the way which we knew ...
Page 140
... rest for the good purposes of our present and eternal welfare , is not to be regarded . He will exclaim against the teachers of obedience to it ; and tells us , that the poor , and the oppressed , and the heavy burdened slave , should ...
... rest for the good purposes of our present and eternal welfare , is not to be regarded . He will exclaim against the teachers of obedience to it ; and tells us , that the poor , and the oppressed , and the heavy burdened slave , should ...
Contents
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Don Giovanni | 3 |
Faith and death in the late Enlightenment | 17 |
David Hume Of Suicide | 24 |
Copyright | |
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Africans Anna authority believe better blessings body Bonaparte brother cause Christ Christianity church crime cruel dear death divine doctrines Dominique-Vivant Denon Don Giovanni duty DYING earth Elvira Emperor endeavour England Estates-General eternal evil faith father fear France freedom French French Revolution friends give glory grace happiness heard heart human HYMN Inveresk Jamaica JAMES WEDDERBURN Jesus justice King labour Le Père Duchesne Leporello liberty live London LORD Lorenzo da Ponte Mary Prince Masetto master mind misery mistress moral mother Napoleon nation nature Negro never Olney Hymns oppression Ottavio political poor PRIEST principles providence punishment Quobna Ottobah Cugoano reason religion Revolution Robert Wedderburn Scena sense sentiments slavery slaves society soul Source Spenceans terror things Third Estate thought tion told truth universal virtue voice wicked wickedness woman word Zerlina