English Composition and RhetoricScholars' Facsimiles & Reprints, 1996 - 343 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-3 af 41
Side 244
... Pains . We are moved by pleasure and pain to come ; taking steps to secure the one , and to avoid the other . Now , to be so moved , we must have an idea or notion of the pleasure or the pain , obtained by ade- quately recollecting our ...
... Pains . We are moved by pleasure and pain to come ; taking steps to secure the one , and to avoid the other . Now , to be so moved , we must have an idea or notion of the pleasure or the pain , obtained by ade- quately recollecting our ...
Side 249
... pains . ( 1. ) Fcar , Terror , or Dread . Whatever pains us is an ob- ject of avoidance , according to our sense of the pain . This is not fear , but the usual attitude of precaution against harm . But , on certain occasions , pain in ...
... pains . ( 1. ) Fcar , Terror , or Dread . Whatever pains us is an ob- ject of avoidance , according to our sense of the pain . This is not fear , but the usual attitude of precaution against harm . But , on certain occasions , pain in ...
Side 271
... painful effects are admitted into Poetry should be fully redeemed . A work of Art is meant to give us pleasure , and the occur- rence of anything to cause pain must be justified or atoned for . The chief example of the use of pain is ...
... painful effects are admitted into Poetry should be fully redeemed . A work of Art is meant to give us pleasure , and the occur- rence of anything to cause pain must be justified or atoned for . The chief example of the use of pain is ...
Indhold
PART I | 24 |
Advantages of our language in Personification | 25 |
Requisites of those addressed to the Feelings | 26 |
Copyright | |
25 andre sektioner vises ikke
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
abstract action addressed Alliteration appear applied argument arrangement balanced bring called cause character circumstances clause close combination common comparison composition connection considered contains contrast defined described distinct effect emotion English epigram example Exposition expression Extract fact feelings figure force give given greater History human ideas illustration important impression individual instance interest iteration kind knowledge language less light live meaning measure metaphors method mind mode moral narrative nature notions objects oratory original pain paragraph particulars passing person pleasure poetry political present principle probably reason reference regard remark rendered represented Rhetoric rules sense sentence sentiment short similar sometimes sound statement strength style sublime succession suggest things thought tion truth understand usual variety various whole