The Literary Comparison in Jacobean ProsePrinceton University, 1926 - 97 pagina's |
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Pagina 36
... thinking that nature may any- ways be altered by education It is natural for the vine to spread ; the more you seek by art to alter it , the more in the end you shall augment it . It is proper for the palmtree to mount , the heavier you ...
... thinking that nature may any- ways be altered by education It is natural for the vine to spread ; the more you seek by art to alter it , the more in the end you shall augment it . It is proper for the palmtree to mount , the heavier you ...
Pagina 65
... thinking regardless of the literary fashion of his con- temporaries . The Attic style presents him with a vehicle . suited for his needs in general , but he will select the particular elements of this style best suited for his special ...
... thinking regardless of the literary fashion of his con- temporaries . The Attic style presents him with a vehicle . suited for his needs in general , but he will select the particular elements of this style best suited for his special ...
Pagina 80
... thinking of these two men . The comparisons do not have the appearance of practicality which distinguishes Ba- can's figures , but being more abstract , they serve as a vehicle for intellects which think not only through an idea but all ...
... thinking of these two men . The comparisons do not have the appearance of practicality which distinguishes Ba- can's figures , but being more abstract , they serve as a vehicle for intellects which think not only through an idea but all ...
Inhoudsopgave
PART | 7 |
The Effects of the New Rationalism | 15 |
PART II | 25 |
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Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
adorned alliteration aphorism aphoristic appears Arcadia Ascham Attic Prose Attic style Bacon becomes Browne Browne's Burton cause character Cicero Ciceronian cited clarity commonplace comparison contrast deliberately Democritus device Donne's doth drawn effect elaborate English Euphues Euphuism expression fact favorite Felltham following example following figure following passage Francis Bacon frequently Fuller Hall hath Holy homeliness idea illustration imitation incisive Jacobean Age Jacobean prose language Latin Letters libertine literary Lyly Lyly's matter means mediaeval Latin Meditations and Vows Montaigne Muret nature never obscurity observation original parisons peace Petrarcan conceit Petrarch philosophy phrase practical Professor Croll Reader Religio Medici rhetorical Seneca sentence Sermons seventeenth century conceit significant Silver Age simile Sir Henry Wotton stylistic subtlety sustained metaphor Table Talk Tacitus terse things thinking thou thought tion traits true truth ture typical unto VIII virtue words Wotton writers