Literary Criticism: A Short History. Classical and neo-classical criticism, Volume 1University of Chicago P., 1978 - 336 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 59
Page 67
... argument , but [ defect of ] moral purpose . ' " 3 Aristotle's Rhetoric opens with the statement : " Rhetoric is a coun- terpart of dialectic . " But the term dialectic has for Aristotle a softer meaning than for Plato - the meaning of ...
... argument , but [ defect of ] moral purpose . ' " 3 Aristotle's Rhetoric opens with the statement : " Rhetoric is a coun- terpart of dialectic . " But the term dialectic has for Aristotle a softer meaning than for Plato - the meaning of ...
Page 185
... argument . The second person to speak at length , Eugenius ( plausibly to be taken as Dryden's friend Charles Sackville , Lord Buckhurst , 2 great - grandson of that Thomas Sackville who was co - author of Gorboduc , the first " regular ...
... argument . The second person to speak at length , Eugenius ( plausibly to be taken as Dryden's friend Charles Sackville , Lord Buckhurst , 2 great - grandson of that Thomas Sackville who was co - author of Gorboduc , the first " regular ...
Page 225
... argument , are really parts of logic . Rhetoric in fact is mainly logic . What good rhetoric wants is a severe and honest style of adherence to argument . The elocution is the trimmings — or the clippings . Save them who will . " This ...
... argument , are really parts of logic . Rhetoric in fact is mainly logic . What good rhetoric wants is a severe and honest style of adherence to argument . The elocution is the trimmings — or the clippings . Save them who will . " This ...
Contents
Socrates and the Rhapsode PAGE | 3 |
The Internal Focus 555 | 16 |
Poetry as Structure | 21 |
Copyright | |
15 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
18th century Addison aesthetic Alexander Pope ancient appears Aquinas argument Aristotelian Aristotle Aristotle's Atkins Augustan beauty Ben Jonson Book character classical comedy comic concept dialectic dialogue discourse divine doctrine drama Dryden emotion English Ennead epic Epistle Essay ethical fact figures French genius genre Greek hamartia heroic Homer Horace Horatian human humour ideal ideas imagination imitation instance Isocrates Johnson kind later less literary criticism literary theory literature London Longinus meaning medieval metaphor metaphysical mind Minturno modern moral nature neo-classic neo-Platonic object painting passage passions perhaps peripeteia Phaedrus philosopher Plato play pleasure Plotinus poem Poesy poet poetic poetry Pope Pope's principle Quintilian quoted reason Renaissance rhetoric rhetorician romantic Samuel Johnson satire sense Socrates soul speech style sublime Summa Theologiae symbolic term theme theorist things thought tion tragedy tragic translation treatise truth unity verbal verse words writing York