The Rhetoric of Criticism: From Hobbes to ColeridgePergamon Press, 1984 - 127 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 26
... Homer's epics as real encyclopedias , i.e. as containing all the learning of his time . For Homer clearly did not invent all this , he simply included in his poems all the extant , shared , public knowledge of his time . He took over ...
... Homer's epics as real encyclopedias , i.e. as containing all the learning of his time . For Homer clearly did not invent all this , he simply included in his poems all the extant , shared , public knowledge of his time . He took over ...
الصفحة 27
... Homer and Virgil , but lacking in Lucan . In his censure of Caesar and praise of Pompey , he shows himself , as Quintilian says , a rhetorician rather than poet . The other poets , and especially Homer , do not censure their heroes and ...
... Homer and Virgil , but lacking in Lucan . In his censure of Caesar and praise of Pompey , he shows himself , as Quintilian says , a rhetorician rather than poet . The other poets , and especially Homer , do not censure their heroes and ...
الصفحة 28
... Homer again excels the other poets . Virgil took most of his images from Homer , and even if he does have some images not found in Homer and better than his , this doesn't make him a better poet . Hobbes compares a passage from the ...
... Homer again excels the other poets . Virgil took most of his images from Homer , and even if he does have some images not found in Homer and better than his , this doesn't make him a better poet . Hobbes compares a passage from the ...
المحتوى
Hobbess Rhetorical Criticism | 3 |
The Rhetorical Approach in Dryden | 31 |
Humes Of the Standard of Taste | 51 |
حقوق النشر | |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
aesthetic analysis Answer to Davenant Aristotle beauty Biographia called characters Coleridge Coleridge's composition concepts Consequences critical essays David Hume definition diction drama Dryden English criticism epic poem epic poetry expression fact fancy and imagination feeling Gilbert Ryle Gondibert hero heroic poem Hobbes's human nature Hume Hume's images imitation of nature important interest invention James Joyce John Dryden Johnson judgement kind language of poetry linguistic literary criticism literature logic meaning metaphors Milton mind modern commentators moral neoclassical objects observation organic unity painting passage passions philosopher play poet's poetic creation poetic language Preface to Homer principles qualities Quintilian reader refer regarded rhetoric Romantic says sense sentiment Shakespeare speech Standard of Taste style synonymy T. S. Eliot theory things Thomas Hobbes Thorpe thought tragicomedy translation true truth unity of action untranslatability Venus and Adonis virtue whole words Wordsworth's