We have, in the two preceding chapters, arrived at definite conclusions
respecting the power and essence of the imaginative faculty. In these two acts of penetration and combination, its separating and characteristic
attributes are entirely developed; it remains for us only to observe a certain
habit or mode of operation in which it frequently delights, and by which it
addresses itself to our perceptions more forcibly, and asserts its presence more
distinctly than in those mighty but more secret workings wherein its life
consists. oil paintings for sale
In our examination of the combining imagination, we chose to assume the first
or simple conception to be as clear in the absence as in the presence of the
object of it. This, I suppose, is in point of fact never the case, nor is an
approximation to such distinctness of conception always a characteristic of the
imaginative mind. Many persons have thorough and felicitous power of drawing
from memory, yet never originate a thought, nor excite an emotion. buy oil paintings online
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