Selected Essays on RhetoricSouthern Illinois University Press, 1967 - 352 من الصفحات The five essays presented here—Rhetoric, Style, Language, Conversation, and Greek Literature—were published together for the first time in The Collected Writings of Thomas De Quincey in 1889–1890. Frederick Burwick brings the essays together again in this volume, introducing them by tracing the sources and development of a belletristic theory of rhetoric, which he says “is one of the most original, and for a few critics, the most puzzling of the nineteenth century.” Burwick makes the edition complete with a comprehensive index and a selected bibliography. |
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الصفحة 180
... audience : combining into one picture all these circum- stances , one must admit that no such meeting between giddy expectation and the very excess of power to meet its most clamorous calls is likely to have occurred before or since ...
... audience : combining into one picture all these circum- stances , one must admit that no such meeting between giddy expectation and the very excess of power to meet its most clamorous calls is likely to have occurred before or since ...
الصفحة 327
... audience must very seriously have interfered with the intellectual display of an orator . Not a word could he venture to say in the way of censure towards the public will - not even hypothetically to insinuate a fault ; not a syllable ...
... audience must very seriously have interfered with the intellectual display of an orator . Not a word could he venture to say in the way of censure towards the public will - not even hypothetically to insinuate a fault ; not a syllable ...
الصفحة 331
... audience sometimes in motion for dinner , and acquired ( as is well known ) the surname of the Dinner Bell.2 Now , in the Athenian audience all this was impossible . Neither in political nor in forensic harangues was there any licence ...
... audience sometimes in motion for dinner , and acquired ( as is well known ) the surname of the Dinner Bell.2 Now , in the Athenian audience all this was impossible . Neither in political nor in forensic harangues was there any licence ...
المحتوى
INTRODUCTION by Frederick Burwick | xi |
Rhetoric | 81 |
Style | 134 |
حقوق النشر | |
4 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
absolute amongst ancient applied Aristotelian Rhetoric Aristotle artificial artist Athenian Athens audience beauty Burke called century character Cicero colloquial composition conversation critics Demosthenes diction effect English enthymeme essay Euripides expression fact fancy feeling French German Grecian Greece Greek language Greek Literature Herodotus Homer human idea Iliad illustration instance intellectual interest Isocrates Jeremy Taylor language Latin less literary logic Lord manner matter means metre Milton mind mode modern natural style necessity never object orator oratory ornamental passions Paterculus peculiar perhaps Pericles period Persian philosophic Pindar Plutarch poetry poets political popular possible principle prose purpose qualities question Quincey Quincey's Quintilian reader reason relation remark rhetoric and eloquence rhetorician Roman Schiller Scottish sense sensibility sentence separate Socrates speaking sublime taste theory thing Thomas De Quincey thought Thucydides tion true truth Whately whilst whole word writer Xenophon