“The” Works of Thomas De Quincey: Style and rhetoricA. & C. Black, 1862 |
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Pagina viii
... question or hesitation and already at this point , before they go a step further , all readers capable of measuring the disappointment , or of appreciating the temper in which such a self - conquest must have been achieved , will ...
... question or hesitation and already at this point , before they go a step further , all readers capable of measuring the disappointment , or of appreciating the temper in which such a self - conquest must have been achieved , will ...
Pagina xiii
... question so entirely childish , as whether Milton ever was , in any legal sense , clothed with the character of schoolmaster ? I refuse even , out of rever- ential sympathy with that majestic mind that would have made Milton refuse , to ...
... question so entirely childish , as whether Milton ever was , in any legal sense , clothed with the character of schoolmaster ? I refuse even , out of rever- ential sympathy with that majestic mind that would have made Milton refuse , to ...
Pagina xiv
Thomas De Quincey. Upon this I have one question to propound ; and I will make it more impressive and perhaps intelligible by going back into history , and searching about for a great man , as to whom the same question may be put with ...
Thomas De Quincey. Upon this I have one question to propound ; and I will make it more impressive and perhaps intelligible by going back into history , and searching about for a great man , as to whom the same question may be put with ...
Pagina xv
... question arises severally in the Milton and the Hannibal case - What relation , unless for the false fleeting eye of malice , has the act or the occasion indicated to the supposed solemnity of the vow alleged ? Show us the logic which ...
... question arises severally in the Milton and the Hannibal case - What relation , unless for the false fleeting eye of malice , has the act or the occasion indicated to the supposed solemnity of the vow alleged ? Show us the logic which ...
Pagina 9
... question which arose , was — At what hour would the Count Fitz - Hum be pleased to take supper ? But this question the Count Fitz - Hum referred wholly to the two ladies ; and for this one night he notified his plea- sure , that no ...
... question which arose , was — At what hour would the Count Fitz - Hum be pleased to take supper ? But this question the Count Fitz - Hum referred wholly to the two ladies ; and for this one night he notified his plea- sure , that no ...
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Alexander Ali Pacha amongst ancient Aristotle Armatoles Athenian Athens Cæsar called cause century character Christian Cicero circumstances common composition connexion dice diction effect eloquence enemy English enthymeme Epirus Euripides evil fact fancy father favour feeling Fitz-Hum French German Gordon Grecian Greece Greek Greek literature hand Herodotus honour human instance intellectual interest Isocrates Jeremy Taylor Johnson language literature ment merit Milton mind mode modern Morea natural necessity notice object occasion orators Pacha Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Paterculus peculiar Pericles Persia person philosophy poetry poets political popular possible prince prose purpose reader reason remarkable respect revolution rhetoric rhetorician Roman Rome Rudolph Schroll sense sentence separate Seraskier sion Socrates solemn speaking spirit style Suli Suliotes supposed thing thought tion town true truth Turkish Turks vast Wallachia Whately whilst whole word writers Xenophon
Populaire passages
Pagina 35 - So am I as the rich, whose blessed key Can bring him to his sweet up-locked treasure, The which he will not every hour survey, For blunting the fine point of seldom pleasure. Therefore are feasts so solemn and so rare, Since, seldom coming, in the long year set, Like stones of worth they thinly placed are, Or captain jewels in the carcanet.
Pagina 57 - As long as our sovereign lord the king, and his faithful subjects, the lords and commons of this realm — the triple cord which no man can break...
Pagina 56 - British monarchy, not more limited than fenced by the orders of the state, shall, like the proud Keep of Windsor, rising in the majesty of proportion, and girt with the double belt of his kindred and coeval towers...
Pagina 90 - Thus much I should perhaps have said though I were sure I should have spoken only to trees and stones; and had none to cry to, but with the Prophet, O earth, earth, earth!
Pagina 246 - Anaxagoras, who first theorized successfully upon man and the world. Next come, whether great or not, the still more famous philosophers, Socrates, Plato, Xenophon. Then comes, leaning upon Pericles, as sometimes Pericles leaned upon him, the divine artist, Phidias; and behind this immortal man walk Herodotus and Thucydides. What a procession to Eleusis would these men have formed! What a frieze, if some great artist could arrange it as dramatically as Chaucer has arranged the Pilgrimage to Canterbury...
Pagina 74 - Any composition in verse, (and none that is not,) is always called, whether good or bad, a Poem, by all who have no favourite hypothesis to maintain.
Pagina 196 - It makes us blush to add that even grammar is so little of a perfect attainment amongst us that, with two or three exceptions (one being Shakspere, whom some affect to consider as belonging to a semi-barbarous age), we have never seen the writer, through a circuit of prodigious reading, who has not sometimes violated the accidence or the syntax of English^, grammar.
Pagina 56 - Such are their ideas ; such their religion, and such their law. But as to our country and our race, as long as the wellcompacted structure of our church and state, the sanctuary, the holy of holies of that ancient law, defended by reverence, defended...
Pagina 170 - Three out of four will have been written by that class of women who have the most leisure and the most interest in a correspondence by the post — that class who combine more of intelligence, cultivation, and of thoughtfulness, than any other in Europe — the class of unmarried women above twenty-five — an increasing class ; 2 women who, from mere dignity of character, have renounced all prospects of conjugal and parental life, rather than descend into habits unsuitable to their birth.
Pagina 248 - Great we cannot call him in conscience ; and, therefore, by way of compromise, we call him long, which, in one sense, he certainly was ; for he lived through four-and-twenty Olympiads, each containing four solar years. He narrowly escaped being a hundred years old ; and though that did not carry him from centre to centre, yet, as each system might be supposed to protend a radius each way of twenty years, he had, in fact, a full personal cognisance (and pretty equally) of the two systems, remote as...