The Elements of Rhetoric (1878)Scholars' Facsimilies & Reprints, 2000 - 583 páginas |
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Página 127
James De Mille. Religious hymns exhibit this very frequently , as- " Thou art gone to the grave , but we will not deplore thee . " " Sister , thou wast mild and lovely . " " Brother , thou hast gone to rest . " The same figure is ...
James De Mille. Religious hymns exhibit this very frequently , as- " Thou art gone to the grave , but we will not deplore thee . " " Sister , thou wast mild and lovely . " " Brother , thou hast gone to rest . " The same figure is ...
Página 180
... thou bitter sky , Thou dost not bite so nigh As benefits forgot . Though thou the waters warp , Thy sting is not so sharp As friend remembered not . " - SHAKESPEARE . " Full fathoms five thy father lies . " - SHAKESPEARE . Alliteration ...
... thou bitter sky , Thou dost not bite so nigh As benefits forgot . Though thou the waters warp , Thy sting is not so sharp As friend remembered not . " - SHAKESPEARE . " Full fathoms five thy father lies . " - SHAKESPEARE . Alliteration ...
Página 277
... thou hast been our dwelling - place in all generations . " Before the mountains were brought forth - or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world - even from everlasting to everlasting - thou art God . " " These are they which came ...
... thou hast been our dwelling - place in all generations . " Before the mountains were brought forth - or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world - even from everlasting to everlasting - thou art God . " " These are they which came ...
Conteúdo
PERSPICUITY IN WORDS SIMPLICITY 17 | xix |
PERSPICUITY IN WORDS CONTINUED PRECISION | 27 |
PERSPICUITY IN Words Continued Purity | 41 |
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Æneid allusion ancient Anglo-Saxon antithesis argument arises associated Asyndeton beautiful Burke called character chief chiefly Cicero clauses common composition considered Demosthenes divisions East India Bill effect elegance emotion emphasis English English language enthymeme epithets euphony example exhibit expression fault feeling fiction figures of speech following passage force frequent genius give Greek harmony heaven honor human humor idea Iliad illustrated importance Jean Peltier kind king language Latin literature Lord lyric poetry means metaphor Milton mind modern narration narrative nature never object onomatopoeia orator oratory order of thought Paradise Lost passion periphrasis perspicuity persuasion poem poet poetry polysyndeton present proposition prose qualities Quincey Quintilian reader refers rhetoric ridiculous satire says scenes secondly seen sentence sentiments Shakespeare sometimes soul sound speaker statement style subject-matter sublime taste term thee things thou Thucydides tion vivacity Warren Hastings words writer