Letters on Literature, Taste, and Composition: Addressed to His Son, Bind 2Phillips, 1808 |
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Side 2
... reasons , which I shall afterwards assign , this is by far the easiest form of narrative com- position . Let any man of letters try to compose an ar- gumentativè , or even an oratorical discourse , and let him afterwards attempt a ...
... reasons , which I shall afterwards assign , this is by far the easiest form of narrative com- position . Let any man of letters try to compose an ar- gumentativè , or even an oratorical discourse , and let him afterwards attempt a ...
Side 3
... reason for the long periods of Claren- don , and some other historians . It is difficult too to draw the picture ; for narrative is a pic- ture in words , so that it shall be full , clear , and impressive , and keep awake the reader's ...
... reason for the long periods of Claren- don , and some other historians . It is difficult too to draw the picture ; for narrative is a pic- ture in words , so that it shall be full , clear , and impressive , and keep awake the reader's ...
Side 17
... reasons which I have already assigned ; yet the style should not be monotonous , but ani- mated , whenever the occasion is of sufficient importance . Historical writing as such , without reference to the poetical histories is very ...
... reasons which I have already assigned ; yet the style should not be monotonous , but ani- mated , whenever the occasion is of sufficient importance . Historical writing as such , without reference to the poetical histories is very ...
Side 20
... reason is obvious - Oratory is nearly allied to history , and no people ever cultivated oratory with more indefatigable at- tention . The democratical governments of these nations afforded such a scope for the dis- play of eloquence ...
... reason is obvious - Oratory is nearly allied to history , and no people ever cultivated oratory with more indefatigable at- tention . The democratical governments of these nations afforded such a scope for the dis- play of eloquence ...
Side 32
... reason to believe that he meant the whole to form a connected chain , comprehending the history of the Roman empire from the age of Augustus to his own time . There never was a genius more happily adapted to the writing of history than ...
... reason to believe that he meant the whole to form a connected chain , comprehending the history of the Roman empire from the age of Augustus to his own time . There never was a genius more happily adapted to the writing of history than ...
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Letters on Literature, Taste, and Composition, Addressed to His Son, Bind 2 G. 1754-1808 Gregory Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2016 |
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action admired Æneid antient Aristotle beautiful bound Cæsar cæsura character charm chiefly Cicero classical comedy composition containing critics DAVID BLAIR DEAR JOHN didactic drama Dryden elegant elegy English English language epic poem epic poetry epigram epistles excellent fable fancy French genius Greek happily Herodotus historian Homer Horace Hudibras human Iliad imitation interesting Johnson kind language letters literature lively Livy lyric lyric poetry manner Milton mind modern moral narrative nature nerally never observed original Othello passions pastoral perhaps Pindar plot poet poetical poetry Pope Pope's prose quæ racters remark rhyme Roman Sallust satire scarcely scene sentiment Shakspeare song specimen spirit style sublime syllables Tacitus taste Theocritus thing thou thought tion tragedy translation unity verse Virgil whole WILLIAM MAVOR words writer Xenophon young persons δε