English Composition and RhetoricScholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, 1996 - 343 sider |
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Side 69
... greater amount of meaning than either conveys . ( 2. ) For the sake of putting greater stress on the prominent points of the exposition . Good exposition requires that the main subject should be distinguished from the subordinate parts ...
... greater amount of meaning than either conveys . ( 2. ) For the sake of putting greater stress on the prominent points of the exposition . Good exposition requires that the main subject should be distinguished from the subordinate parts ...
Side 132
... greater indeed than the object deserves , but greater than the generality are willing to bestow . " The change con- sists in beginning with the principal subject . The sentence is unavoidably loose ; any attempt to suspend the sense by ...
... greater indeed than the object deserves , but greater than the generality are willing to bestow . " The change con- sists in beginning with the principal subject . The sentence is unavoidably loose ; any attempt to suspend the sense by ...
Side 267
... greater beauties and higher loveliness than we can find on carth . A poem is a sus- tained hyperbole . In scenic delineation , besides completing the harmony , the poct goes beyond nature in the richness of the accumulation , and colors ...
... greater beauties and higher loveliness than we can find on carth . A poem is a sus- tained hyperbole . In scenic delineation , besides completing the harmony , the poct goes beyond nature in the richness of the accumulation , and colors ...
Indhold
PART I | 24 |
Advantages of our language in Personification | 25 |
Requisites of those addressed to the Feelings | 26 |
Copyright | |
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abstract action Alexander Bain Allegory Alliteration Amphibrachic Antithesis applied argument arrangement Bain cach called Campbell character circumstances clause climax combination comparison composition concrete connection consonants contrast degree Demosthenes described discase effect emotion English English language epigram example excitement Exposition expression Extract fact feelings force genius give harmony History human Iliad illustration impression instance interest iteration kind knowledge language ludicrous meaning melody ment metaphors method Metonymy mind mode moral mountains narrative nations nature objects obverse orator oratory pain paragraph passion pathos periphrasis personification Persuasion phrase Plato pleasure poct poet poetic poetry political predicate principle reference rendered Rhetoric Rhyme rules sense sentence sentiment simile similitude Socrates sometimes sound statement strength style sublime subordinate suggest syllables Synecdoche tautology tence things thou thought tion Transferred Epithet Trochaic truth variety verb vowels Whately words