Macaulay's Milton: Edited to Illustrate the Laws of Rhetoric and CompositionLongmans, Green & Company, 1894 - 179 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 26
Página vii
... thing , or at least the chief thing , for which the classic is valuable , is its information . But surely the chief value of a classic is one of style If so , why does this aspect not receive more attention from the annotator ? Why ...
... thing , or at least the chief thing , for which the classic is valuable , is its information . But surely the chief value of a classic is one of style If so , why does this aspect not receive more attention from the annotator ? Why ...
Página x
... things are distinct enquiries and should not con- flict . This is in accordance with the first prin- ciples of division of labour . We might use the essay on Milton as a Reading Book , and make the reading lesson the occasion for ...
... things are distinct enquiries and should not con- flict . This is in accordance with the first prin- ciples of division of labour . We might use the essay on Milton as a Reading Book , and make the reading lesson the occasion for ...
Página xiii
... things are neces- sary . I. A Text - Book where the abstract principles are laid down with scientific precision and in orderly array . 2. An application of the principles to con- crete examples , and an examination of the fitness of the ...
... things are neces- sary . I. A Text - Book where the abstract principles are laid down with scientific precision and in orderly array . 2. An application of the principles to con- crete examples , and an examination of the fitness of the ...
Página 11
... things unknown , the poet's pen Turns them to shapes , and gives to airy nothing A local habitation and a name . ' -Midsummer Night's Dream , Act . V. , sc . I. 15 These are the fruits of the ' fine frenzy ' which he ascribes to the ...
... things unknown , the poet's pen Turns them to shapes , and gives to airy nothing A local habitation and a name . ' -Midsummer Night's Dream , Act . V. , sc . I. 15 These are the fruits of the ' fine frenzy ' which he ascribes to the ...
Página 23
... things in their own nature inconsistent , he has failed , 10 as every one else must have failed . We cannot identify ourselves with the characters as in a good play . We cannot identify ourselves with the poet , as in a good ode . The ...
... things in their own nature inconsistent , he has failed , 10 as every one else must have failed . We cannot identify ourselves with the characters as in a good play . We cannot identify ourselves with the poet , as in a good ode . The ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
abruptness admire Æneid Æschylus Agonistes antithesis army Balance called Catherine Macaulay character characteristic Charles chief circumstances classical clear climactic arrangement Comus concrete contrast criticism Cromwell Dante digression Divine Comedy effect emphasis England English Eschylus essay Euripides example of Macaulay's Explicit Reference exposition Faithful Shepherdess feelings figure freedom Greek hero Iliad illustration images intellectual James king language Latin Leslie Stephen liberty literary literature lofty Long Parliament lyrical Macau Macaulay Mark means metaphor Metonymy Milton Milton's conduct mind nature never noble opening sentence opinions Paradise Lost Paradise Regained paragraph Parallel Construction Parliament peculiar perfect period Petition of Right Petrarch philosopher phrase of reference poems poet poetical political principle profusion prominence prose public conduct Puritans reader reason remarks Revolution sake Samson Samson Agonistes semicolon simile spirit style theme thing thought tion topic tyrant words writers wrote