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    A Defence of Poetry - Page 2

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    produced in him by surrounding objects in a similar manner;
    and language and gesture, together with plastic or pictorial imitation,
    become the image of the combined effect of those objects, and of
    his apprehension of them. Man in society, with all his passions and
    his pleasures, next becomes the object of the passions and pleasures
    of man; an additional class of emotions produces an augmented
    treasure of expressions; and language, gesture, and the imitative
    arts, become at once the representation and the medium, the pencil
    and the picture, the chisel and the statue, the chord and the
    harmony. The social sympathies, or those laws from which, as from
    its elements, society results, begin to develop themselves from
    the moment that two human beings coexist; the future is contained
    within the present, as the plant within the seed; and equality,
    diversity, unity, contrast, mutual dependence, become the principles
    alone capable of affording the motives according to which the
    will of a social being is determined to action, inasmuch as he is
    social; and constitute pleasure in sensation, virtue in sentiment,
    beauty in art, truth in reasoning, and love in the intercourse of
    kind. Hence men, even in the infancy of society, observe a certain
    order in their words and actions, distinct from that of the objects
    and the impressions represented by them, all expression being
    subject to the laws of that from which it proceeds. But let us
    dismiss those more general considerations which might involve an
    inquiry into the principles of society itself, and restrict our
    view to the manner in which the imagination is expressed upon its
    forms.

    In the youth of the world, men dance and sing and imitate natural
    objects, observing in these actions, as in all others, a certain
    rhythm or order. And, although all men observe a similar, they
    observe not the same order, in the motions of the dance, in the
    melody of the song, in the combinations of language, in the series
    of their imitations of natural objects. For there is a certain
    order or rhythm belonging to each of these classes of mimetic
    representation, from which the hearer and the spectator receive
    an intenser and purer pleasure than from any other: the sense
    of an approximation to this order has been called taste by modern

    writers. Every man in the infancy of art observes an order which
    approximates more or less closely to that from which this highest
    delight results: but the diversity is not sufficiently marked, as
    that its gradations should be sensible, except in those instances
    where the predominance of this faculty of approximation to the
    beautiful (for so we may be permitted to name the relation between
    this highest pleasure and its cause) is very great. Those in whom
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