English Composition and Rhetoric, Parte1Longmans, Green, 1887 |
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Página 119
... death ( 12 ) ; they have also the same instincts , exposing them to pains ( 13 , 14 ) ; and the same sentient appa- ratus is revealed by science ( 15 ) . Moreover , their pain is unalleviated by the sentiments and hopes that help men to ...
... death ( 12 ) ; they have also the same instincts , exposing them to pains ( 13 , 14 ) ; and the same sentient appa- ratus is revealed by science ( 15 ) . Moreover , their pain is unalleviated by the sentiments and hopes that help men to ...
Página 201
... Death , Death , and his brother Sleep ! One , pale as yonder waning moon , With lips of lurid blue : The other , rosy as the morn , When , throned on ocean's wave , It blushes o'er the world : Yet both so passing wonderful ! Death is ...
... Death , Death , and his brother Sleep ! One , pale as yonder waning moon , With lips of lurid blue : The other , rosy as the morn , When , throned on ocean's wave , It blushes o'er the world : Yet both so passing wonderful ! Death is ...
Página 223
... Death , all - eloquent ! you only prove What dust we dote on , when ' tis man we love . The use of the Figure is ... death behold , As Adam saw her prime . In Tennyson's Ode on the Death of the Duke of.
... Death , all - eloquent ! you only prove What dust we dote on , when ' tis man we love . The use of the Figure is ... death behold , As Adam saw her prime . In Tennyson's Ode on the Death of the Duke of.
Contenido
ORDER OF WORDS | 1 |
Beginning and End distinguished | 7 |
Selection of aspects as disclosed to the eye of the spectator | 9 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
adjective advantage adverb applied arrangement balance battle of Hastings beginning brevity called Circumlocution circumstances close compared comparison composition condensation conjunction connection contrast diffuseness distinct effect emotion emphasis emphatic employed epigram exemplifies expression fact farther feeling figure following example force gained given gives grammatical Greek hath human Hyder Ali idea Iliad illustration important impressive indicate instances intellectual inversion iteration justified language loose Mark Pattison meaning ment metaphor metre mind nature noun object opening sentence Paradise Lost paragraph parallelism passage period periphrasis phatic phrase Pilgrim's Progress pleasure poet poetic poetry Pope Pope's preceding predicate principal subject principle prose qualifying Quintilian quoted reason redundant reference remark rendered rhetorical rule second clause sense simile similitudes stanza statement style subordinate Synecdoche Tautology tence things thou thought tion Unity unto verb Washington Irving whole William Morris words writers