The Philosophy of Rhetoric, Band 1A. Constable & Company, 1816 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 100
Seite vii
... mind ; and , aided by the lights which the poet and the orator so amply furnish , to disclose its secret move- ments , tracing its principal channels of per- ception and action , as near as possible , to their source : and , on the ...
... mind ; and , aided by the lights which the poet and the orator so amply furnish , to disclose its secret move- ments , tracing its principal channels of per- ception and action , as near as possible , to their source : and , on the ...
Seite ix
... mind . Indeed , the much greater part of it will , he is persuaded , be level to the capacity of all those readers ( not per- haps the most numerous class ) who think reflection of some use in reading , and who do not read merely with ...
... mind . Indeed , the much greater part of it will , he is persuaded , be level to the capacity of all those readers ( not per- haps the most numerous class ) who think reflection of some use in reading , and who do not read merely with ...
Seite 5
... mind is necessary , than is required for the exer- cise of those called mechanical . The character directly opposite to the empiric is the visionary ; for it is not in theology only that there are vi- sionaries . Of the two extremes I ...
... mind is necessary , than is required for the exer- cise of those called mechanical . The character directly opposite to the empiric is the visionary ; for it is not in theology only that there are vi- sionaries . Of the two extremes I ...
Seite 10
... mind , and more especially in the principles of the imagination . It is also in the human mind that we must investigate the source of some of the useful arts . Logic , whose end is the discovery of truth , is founded in the doctrine of ...
... mind , and more especially in the principles of the imagination . It is also in the human mind that we must investigate the source of some of the useful arts . Logic , whose end is the discovery of truth , is founded in the doctrine of ...
Seite 11
... mind , as eloquence , or the art of speaking , in the extensive sense in which I employ the term . For in the first place , that it ought to be ranked among the polite or fine arts , is manifest from this , that in all its exertions ...
... mind , as eloquence , or the art of speaking , in the extensive sense in which I employ the term . For in the first place , that it ought to be ranked among the polite or fine arts , is manifest from this , that in all its exertions ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acknowledge admit adverb analogy appear argument axioms barbarism beauty canon catachresis Chap character circumstances common commonly consequence considered contrary critics degree denominated denote derive discourse discover doth Dr Johnson Dr Priestley Dunciad effect eloquence employed English equal evidence example excited experience expression favour former give grammar hath hearers Hence Hudibras human humour ideas idiom imagination impropriety instance justly kind knowledge language latter laughter least manner means memory ment mind moral nature necessary neral never object observed orator pain participle particular passions perhaps periphrasis perly person perspicuity persuade phrases pity pleasure poet preposition present preterite principles produce properly Quintilian racter reason regard relation remark render resemblance respect ridicule rience Romani sense sentiments signifies sion solecism solely sometimes sophism sort speak speaker species Spect style syllogism term thing tion tongue tropes truth verb wherein words writers