[14] The common character of these arts has been overlooked.
[15] Proportion is here employed, not as expressing an intrinsic relation, as in the beauty of inanimate beings, but as expressing an extrinsic relation to fitness for ends.
[16] “The Nervous System, Anatomical and Physiological: in which the Functions of the various Parts of the Brain are, for the first time, assigned.”
[17] Communicated by the writer to the “Magazine of the Fine Arts,” No. 11, for June, 1833.
[18] “Human Nature,” chap, ix., sec. 13.
[19] “Reflexions Critiques sur la Poesie et sur la Peinture.”
[20] “Reflexions sur la Poetique.”
[21] “Adventurer,” No. 110.
[22] Essay on Tragedy.
[23] To some it may appear, that the organs and functions of digestion, respiration, and generation, are not involved by this arrangement; but such a notion can originate only in superficial observation.