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CONTENTS.
PAGE
A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our
Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful -
-
121
[The first edition of this work was published in 1756; the
second, with large additions, in the year 1757.]
IV. Of Delight and Pleasure, as opposed to
each other
128
V. Joy and Grief
130
VI. Of the Passions which belong to Self-pre-
SECT.
(
VIII. Of the Passions which belong to Society, 134
IX. The final cause of the Difference between
the Passions belonging to Self-preser-
vation, and those which regard the
Obscurity with regard to the Passions,
[IV.] The same Subject continued
161
163
IV. Proportion not the cause of Beauty in the
X. How far the idea of Beauty may be applied
to the Qualities of the Mind
232
XI. How far the idea of Beauty may be ap-
How the Sublime is produced
262
VI. How Pain can be a cause of Delight
VII. Exercise necessary for the finer Organs,
263
265
VIII. Why things not dangerous sometimes
produce a passion like Terrour
266
IX. Why Visual Objects of great dimensions
II. The common Effect of Poetry, not by
VI. Poetry not strictly an imative art
VII. How Words influence the Passions