Date: 1776
"But it is evident, that this creative faculty, the fancy, frequently lends her aid in promoting still nobler ends. From her exuberant stores most of those tropes and figures are extracted, which, when properly employed, have such a marvellous efficacy in rousing the passions, and by some secret,...
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)
Date: 1776
"It is this which hath been so justly celebrated as giving one man an ascendant over others, superior even to what despotism itself can bestow; since by the latter the more ignoble part, only the body and its members, are enslaved; whereas, from the dominion of the former, nothing is exempted, ne...
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)
Date: 1776
"Would we penetrate farther, and agitate the soul, we must exhibit only some vivid strokes, some expressive features, not decorated as for show (all ostentation being both despicable and hurtful here), but such as appear the natural exposition of those bright and deep impressions, made by the sub...
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)
Date: 1776
"In respect of dignity, or the impression they make upon the mind, they must be things homogeneous."
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)
Date: 1776
"It is likewise witty, for, not to mention the play on words like that remarked in the former example, a trope familiar to this author, you have here a comparison of---a woman's chastity to a piece of porcelain,---her honour to a gaudy robe,---her prayers to a fantastical disguise,---her heart to...
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)
Date: 1776
"Remembrance instantly succeeds sensation, insomuch that the memory becomes the sole repository of the knowledge received from sense; knowledge which, without this repository, would be as instantaneously lost as it is gotten, and could be of no service to the mind."
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)
Date: 1776
"Our sensations would be no better than the fleeting pictures of a moving object on a camera obscura, which leave not the least vestige behind them."
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)
Date: 1776
"Memory therefore is the only original voucher extant, of those past realities for which we had once the evidence of sense. Her ideas are, as it were, the prints that have been left by sensible impressions."
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)
Date: 1776
"For, with regard to the similar circumstances of different facts, as by the repetition such circumstances are more deeply imprinted, the mind acquires a habit of retaining them, omitting those circumstances peculiar to each, wherein their differences consist."
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)
Date: 1776
"Causation considered as an associating principle, is, in his theory, no more than the contiguous succession of two ideas, which is more deeply imprinted on the mind by its experience of a similar contiguity and succession of the impressions from which they are copied."
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)