The Poetry of Abraham CowleyMacmillan, 1979 - 162 Seiten |
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Seite 4
... arguments taken from ' the authority , and good opinion we have , of him that hath said it ' , locutionary truth . I want to distinguish between a method of argument which claims that a statement should be judged on its own merits ...
... arguments taken from ' the authority , and good opinion we have , of him that hath said it ' , locutionary truth . I want to distinguish between a method of argument which claims that a statement should be judged on its own merits ...
Seite 77
... argument develops on one level only , attributing equal meaning ( or lack of meaning ) to all phenomena . My ... argument . Both are religious persuasions cast as love poems , but the first keeps to the limits of Crashaw's devotional ...
... argument develops on one level only , attributing equal meaning ( or lack of meaning ) to all phenomena . My ... argument . Both are religious persuasions cast as love poems , but the first keeps to the limits of Crashaw's devotional ...
Seite 102
... Argument then is artistic or non - artistic , as Aristotle partitions it in the second of the Rhetoric : artistic , which creates belief by itself and by its nature , is divided into the primary and the deri- vative primary . Non ...
... Argument then is artistic or non - artistic , as Aristotle partitions it in the second of the Rhetoric : artistic , which creates belief by itself and by its nature , is divided into the primary and the deri- vative primary . Non ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abraham Cowley Aeneid argued argument assert Bacon Beaumont Book Cambridge ceremonial Civil concept concors context Countess of Denbigh Cowley's Davideis Descartes described discourse divine Donne Donne's double bind edition elegy emphasis English epic Essays Eternity example faith Falkland footnote frame of reference Francis Bacon Gregory Hobbes Hobbes's hope human imagery images intellectual Jonson Joseph Beaumont kind King Leviathan lines literary locutionary truth lover lyric ment metaphor Metaphysical Metaphysical Poetry Milton mind Mistress mixt wit mode monarchy monody motion Muse nature numbers Ovid paradox person propounding Peterhouse Philosophy Pindaric Pindaric ode poem poetic poetry poets political Prophet propositional truth Puritan reader reinvents Renaissance rhetoric rhyme Richard Crashaw ritual sacred Samuel Saul seems sense Seventeenth-Century Sprat stanza statement style thee theological things Thomas Hobbes Thomas Sprat Thou thought tion tone traditional trans Tyrant verse volumes Oxford words writing wrote