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 28
... thing that has yet been taught , and every thing which remains to be ex- plored , is but the means . The vital principle of every cause , I have heretofore told you , consists in the state , or proposition ; and I may now add , that the ...
... thing that has yet been taught , and every thing which remains to be ex- plored , is but the means . The vital principle of every cause , I have heretofore told you , consists in the state , or proposition ; and I may now add , that the ...
Strona 29
... thing , which the orator can alledge , not resulting from his own talent . Internal proof is that , which he draws from his personal resour- ces of ingenuity . External proof is evidence ; in- ternal proof is argument . When a ...
... thing , which the orator can alledge , not resulting from his own talent . Internal proof is that , which he draws from his personal resour- ces of ingenuity . External proof is evidence ; in- ternal proof is argument . When a ...
Strona 32
... thing is shown ; an example is a thing , which by its re- semblance may indicate another . When Signs are of two kinds , certain or uncertain . A certain or infallible sign is that , which so uni- versally accompanies the thing it ...
... thing is shown ; an example is a thing , which by its re- semblance may indicate another . When Signs are of two kinds , certain or uncertain . A certain or infallible sign is that , which so uni- versally accompanies the thing it ...
Strona 53
... things avoid every semblance of harshness or inhumanity . Is seduction or adul- tery the crime you drag to punishment ? How careful must you be to preserve your own purity unsullied ! Whatsoever in short you denounce , as guilt in ...
... things avoid every semblance of harshness or inhumanity . Is seduction or adul- tery the crime you drag to punishment ? How careful must you be to preserve your own purity unsullied ! Whatsoever in short you denounce , as guilt in ...
Strona 55
... things so obvious to his hearers , that it might properly have been altogeth- er omitted ; but he has inserted it , and by the form he has given to it has wound up the climax of his argument to its highest and keenest point . But this ...
... things so obvious to his hearers , that it might properly have been altogeth- er omitted ; but he has inserted it , and by the form he has given to it has wound up the climax of his argument to its highest and keenest point . But this ...
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