The Enchanted Glass: The Elizabethan Mind in LiteratureBlackwell, 1960 - 293 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 31 筆
第 163 頁
... rhetoric was the authorized and only recognized means . In- deed , rhetoric was the art of making the old seem new . 4 It should also be said that , as a whole , Elizabethan writers entered more strongly than the writers of Chaucer's ...
... rhetoric was the authorized and only recognized means . In- deed , rhetoric was the art of making the old seem new . 4 It should also be said that , as a whole , Elizabethan writers entered more strongly than the writers of Chaucer's ...
第 166 頁
... rhetoric is so naturally employed as almost to escape notice . There is no longer any creaking of the machine . We are not for that reason , however , to think that Eliza- bethan literature had forgotten or rejected rhetorical art ...
... rhetoric is so naturally employed as almost to escape notice . There is no longer any creaking of the machine . We are not for that reason , however , to think that Eliza- bethan literature had forgotten or rejected rhetorical art ...
第 170 頁
... rhetoric . It is Aristotle and the Aristotelian spirit which offer a better explanation of this enthusi- asm than the vaguely described exuberance of the age , which is usually adduced as a reason . Aristotle's rhetoric is political ...
... rhetoric . It is Aristotle and the Aristotelian spirit which offer a better explanation of this enthusi- asm than the vaguely described exuberance of the age , which is usually adduced as a reason . Aristotle's rhetoric is political ...
內容
CHAPTER PAGE I THE UNIVERSAL NATURE OF THINGS I | 1 |
DERIVATIONS AND INFERENCES | 32 |
PREOCCUPATIONS AND PREJUDGMENTS | 61 |
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