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9278.42.2
RARVARD COLLEGE LIBRARY
1875, Karch 22. Walker Bequest.
سکتے ہیں میں جو
49-173 18
CHAP. V. Of the qualities of style strictly rhetorical.... I
CHAP. VI. Of perspicuity
4
Part III.
Part IV.
From using the same word in different senses .. 17
From an uncertain reference in pronouns and
24
25
33
56
57
60
64
From want of meaning...
Under this the various kinds of nonsense,
67
.68
75
76
Page
CHAP. VII. What is the cause that nonsense so often es-
capes being detected, both by the writer and
SECT. I. The nature and power of signs, both in speak-
ing and in thinking
The application of the preceding principles...
The extensive usefulness of perspicuity
When is obscurity apposite, if ever it be appo-
SECT. II.
CHAP. VIII.
SECT. I.
Objections answered
CHAP. IX.
site, and what kind?
...
May there not be an excess of perspicuity?
BOOK III.
The discriminating Properties of Elocution.
80
ib.
98
III
121
130
CHAP. I.
Of vivacity as depending on the choice of words
Proper terms .
151
Part I.
Part II.
I.
The less for the more general...
Preliminary observations concerning tropes... ib.
The different sorts of tropes conducive to viva-
city...
2. The most interesting circumstance distinguish-
...163
ib..
The use of those tropes which are obstructive
to vivacity...
What are articulate sounds capable of imitat-
ing, and in what degree?.
Part II. In what esteem ought this kind of imitation to
be held, and when ought it to be attempt-
ed?....
CHAP. II. Of vivacity as depending on the number of the
words
222
226
SECT. I. This quality explained and exemplified..... 226
SECT. II. The principal offences against brevity consider-
SECT. I. Of the nature of arrangement, and the principal
264
Subdivision of these into periods and loose sentences ib.
Observations on periods, and on the use of an-
tithesis in the composition of sentences.
300
gard to arrangement ...
SECT. III.
Observations on loose sentences..
Review of what has been deduced above in re-
CHAP. IV. Of the connectives employed in combining the
....
319
322
Modern languages compared with Greek and
Latin, particularly in regard to the compo-
CHAP. V. Of the connectives employed in combining the
sentences in a discourse
361
The necessity of connectives for this purpose. 362
Observations on the manner of using the con-
nectives in combining sentences.