An Approach to Love's Labour's LostStanford University, 1964 - 612 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 53
Seite 50
... literary circles , but it is the rhetorical argument of simplicity practiced by Heron and More , and not the stylistic controversies of the seventeenth - century reform movement , which provides a background for understanding ...
... literary circles , but it is the rhetorical argument of simplicity practiced by Heron and More , and not the stylistic controversies of the seventeenth - century reform movement , which provides a background for understanding ...
Seite 128
... literary generation of the 1570's and 1580's , and Young's work is a good example of the kind of criticism Shakespeare scholars will in- creasingly find it to their advantage to absorb . It should be noted that Young's English Petrarke ...
... literary generation of the 1570's and 1580's , and Young's work is a good example of the kind of criticism Shakespeare scholars will in- creasingly find it to their advantage to absorb . It should be noted that Young's English Petrarke ...
Seite 150
... literary contexts for a variety of de- finable argumentative purposes . We have been interested in the appeal to simplicity or plainness of style as a rhetorical technique employed by all sorts and conditions of men , ranging from the ...
... literary contexts for a variety of de- finable argumentative purposes . We have been interested in the appeal to simplicity or plainness of style as a rhetorical technique employed by all sorts and conditions of men , ranging from the ...
Inhalt
Chapter I | 23 |
Appeal to Simplicity in Sixteenth | 49 |
Sir Philip Sidneys Astrophel | 89 |
Urheberrecht | |
3 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
appeal to simplicity argument of simplicity Armado Astrophel and Stella audience Berowne Berowne's Boyet Chapter charity Christian simplicity Cicero Ciceronian Cody concerning context conventional Costard courtesy literature Courtier courtly critical Defence of Poesie didactic doth dramatic early comedies Elizabethan eloquence English Erasmus ethical ethos expression folly hath Holofernes humanist ideal imitation intention John John Lyly Jones King's ladies language learning literary London Longaville Love's Labour's Lost lovers lyric matter Midsummer-Night's Dream moral motivation Nathaniel Neoplatonic noble oration pastoral persuasion Petrarchan phrase plain style Platonizing play Poems poet poetic poetry praise preface Princess Puttenham reference religious Renaissance rhetorical rhetorical argument Rosaline Rosaline's scene sense Shakespeare Shakespearean comedy Sidney's Astrophel simple simplicitie Sir Philip Sidney sixteenth century sonnet sequence speak speech stylistic suggests Thomas Thomas Nashe tion tongue traditional trans translation truth University Press wooing words worth in simplicity Worthies writing York young