Rhetorical Analyses of Literary WorksEdward P. J. Corbett Oxford University Press, 1969 - 272页 |
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共有 37 个结果,这是第 1-3 个
第104页
... play ; " countrymen " the better to identify the play - mob with the mob in the pit - for we are in the Renaissance , at that point when Europe's vast national integers are taking shape , and all the wisdom that comes of the body is to ...
... play ; " countrymen " the better to identify the play - mob with the mob in the pit - for we are in the Renaissance , at that point when Europe's vast national integers are taking shape , and all the wisdom that comes of the body is to ...
第105页
... play - mob , as a character - recipe I do to you . Our author would play upon you ; he would seem to know your stops ; he would sound you from your lowest note to the top of your compass . He thinks you as easy to be played upon as a ...
... play - mob , as a character - recipe I do to you . Our author would play upon you ; he would seem to know your stops ; he would sound you from your lowest note to the top of your compass . He thinks you as easy to be played upon as a ...
第106页
... play . In the next act , the fourth , the persona itself will reappear momentarily as a ghost in Brutus ' tent - but on the whole , after Caesar's death , I am the plot - substitute for Caesar . No wonder Brutus , in his address to the play ...
... play . In the next act , the fourth , the persona itself will reappear momentarily as a ghost in Brutus ' tent - but on the whole , after Caesar's death , I am the plot - substitute for Caesar . No wonder Brutus , in his address to the play ...
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actually analysis answer Apologia appear argument arrangement audience beginning believe called cause chapter character Christian Church classical complex concern considered course death devices difference direct discourse discussion Donne Donne's Dryden effect Elizabethan Emma emotions English Essays established example fact feel figures final follows force given gives hate human important irony James Jane John kind Language least less lines literary logic meaning mind Mistress Modern Language Association moral nature Newman's object opening paragraph particular passage perhaps person persuasion play poem poet poetic poetry Pope position present principle proof prose provides question readers reading reason reference Renaissance response rhetorical criticism says seems sense sentence serve speak speaker speech stanza statement structure Studies style suggest Swift things third thought tion truth turn values whole writing York