Treatises on Poetry, Modern Romance, and RhetoricRoutledge/Thoemmes Press, 1995 - 381 Seiten |
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Seite 346
George Moir. CHAPTER III . THE PRINCIPLES OF STYLE . If Eloquence depended solely on Style , those lofty pre- tensions of rhetoricians which were alluded to in the first paragraph of this paper would be not merely excusable or plausible ...
George Moir. CHAPTER III . THE PRINCIPLES OF STYLE . If Eloquence depended solely on Style , those lofty pre- tensions of rhetoricians which were alluded to in the first paragraph of this paper would be not merely excusable or plausible ...
Seite 347
George Moir. his style to that of his natural powers , the rules of compo- sition may suffice to render his style , if not positively good , at least negatively faultless . But excellence of Style , instead of solely constituting elo ...
George Moir. his style to that of his natural powers , the rules of compo- sition may suffice to render his style , if not positively good , at least negatively faultless . But excellence of Style , instead of solely constituting elo ...
Seite 349
... style in this respect to different classes of readers and hear- ers , the student cannot be so much aided by any rules as by his own judgment and observation ; but in order to avoid , on the one hand , the obscurity which may arise from ...
... style in this respect to different classes of readers and hear- ers , the student cannot be so much aided by any rules as by his own judgment and observation ; but in order to avoid , on the one hand , the obscurity which may arise from ...
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