The Rise of Modern Prose StyleM.I.T. Press, 1968 - 372 pagina's |
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Pagina 74
... feeling for death and to Seneca as well . The entire passage , in contrast to Bacon's , is grounded in particulars ... feels a suppressed , nonutilitarian sensitivity to things- in - themselves . Every once in a while we come across ...
... feeling for death and to Seneca as well . The entire passage , in contrast to Bacon's , is grounded in particulars ... feels a suppressed , nonutilitarian sensitivity to things- in - themselves . Every once in a while we come across ...
Pagina 251
... feeling one of anothers distemperature and inflammation . ” In effect we have a metaphorical and padded description for Lancaster's progression of causal relations and disinctions . Figurative language . We saw in Chapter Five that , de ...
... feeling one of anothers distemperature and inflammation . ” In effect we have a metaphorical and padded description for Lancaster's progression of causal relations and disinctions . Figurative language . We saw in Chapter Five that , de ...
Pagina 294
... feeling becomes too strong , and we have the ridiculous sentimental dramas of the eighteenth century . Even as early ... feelings are toward each other without becoming " fools . " This is hard enough for most of us in the real world ...
... feeling becomes too strong , and we have the ridiculous sentimental dramas of the eighteenth century . Even as early ... feelings are toward each other without becoming " fools . " This is hard enough for most of us in the real world ...
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abstract Advancement ancient Anglican Anti Anti-Ciceronian aphorisms aphoristic Aristotle Attic Bacon Baconian Bernard André brevity character Cicero Ciceronian classical plain style comedy critics Croll Crusoe Daniel Defoe death Defoe discourse Dryden Eachard effect Elizabethan eloquence epistle essays example expression figures genus humile Glanvill Glanvill's History Hobbes ideal ideas imitation impersonal influence Jonson Joseph Glanvill kind knowledge language Latin Learning libertine linguistic literary London matter means metaphor method mimesis mind mode modern Montaigne moral Nashe natural philosophy notions orator oratory passage passions practice praise preaching prose style Puritan qualities Quintilian R. F. Jones reader reason relation Religion Renaissance Restoration comedy Restoration prose rhetorical Robinson Crusoe Royal Society scientific scientists self-revelation Seneca sense sentence sermon seventeenth century soul speaking speech Sprat Stoics stylistic syntax Tacitus theory things thought Tiberius tion tradition truth utilitarian utility Vanity Wilkins Williamson words writing