Lectures on Rhetoric and Oratory: Delivered to the Classes of Senior and Junior Sophisters in Harvard University, Tom 2Hilliard and Metcalf, 1810 |
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Strona 82
... proper here to guard you , and from which I hope you will here- after very sedulously guard yourselves . The first may be termed answering too much ; the second answering too little ; and the third answering your- self , and not your ...
... proper here to guard you , and from which I hope you will here- after very sedulously guard yourselves . The first may be termed answering too much ; the second answering too little ; and the third answering your- self , and not your ...
Strona 117
... proper character and the objects , which it is in- tended to embrace , we cannot forbear to remark an important difference , not only between the rhe- torical writers of Greece and Rome , but between the general character and political ...
... proper character and the objects , which it is in- tended to embrace , we cannot forbear to remark an important difference , not only between the rhe- torical writers of Greece and Rome , but between the general character and political ...
Strona 123
... proper , even when every address to the feelings is exploded . But in that case it consists only of a summary , to remind the hearer of the principal points in the discourse . Some of the Greek rhetoricians ac- cordingly termed it the ...
... proper , even when every address to the feelings is exploded . But in that case it consists only of a summary , to remind the hearer of the principal points in the discourse . Some of the Greek rhetoricians ac- cordingly termed it the ...
Strona 134
... . They are made for marriage , not for divorce . It is not every subject , that requires or admits in its treatment the use of the the pathetic . But , when proper at all , nothing can be more obvious 134 [ LECT . XXIV . CONCLUSION .
... . They are made for marriage , not for divorce . It is not every subject , that requires or admits in its treatment the use of the the pathetic . But , when proper at all , nothing can be more obvious 134 [ LECT . XXIV . CONCLUSION .
Strona 135
... proper at all , nothing can be more obvious , than that the conclusion of the discourse is the place , where it should be applied with the most pointed energy . In judicial trials the passions , which we are directed principally here to ...
... proper at all , nothing can be more obvious , than that the conclusion of the discourse is the place , where it should be applied with the most pointed energy . In judicial trials the passions , which we are directed principally here to ...
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ancient applied argument Aristotle association beauty called catachresis cause character Cicero commencement common composition conclusion confutation considered consists consonant deliberative assemblies Demosthenes digression Dionysius of Halicarnassus discourse distinct division effect elegance elocution eloquence ence English enthymem epichirema examples exordium express feelings figurative language figurative speech gism give Greek guage harmony hearer heart human ideas imagination important induction judicial Junius Latin Latin language lecture literal mankind material meaning memory ment metaphor metonymy mind modern modes nature necessary noun numbers object observed orator oratory Ovid passage passions perhaps period perspicuity poet poetry principles proof proper proposition purity purpose Quinctilian ratiocination reasoning remark rhetoric rhetoricians Roman Rome rule sense sentence sentiment sion sometimes sound speaker speaking species syllables syllogism synecdoche tence term thing thought tion tropes utterance variety verb verse voice vowels whole words writers