Dionysius Longinus on the Sublime:: Translated from the Greek, with Notes and Observations, and Some Account of the Life, Writings and Character of the AuthorJ. Watts: and sold by W. Innys and R. Manby, 1739 - 187 Seiten |
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Seite xxii
... God . The Good - nature alfo of Longinus muft not pass without notice . He bore an Aver- fion to the Sneers and Cavils of those , who , unequal to the weighty Province of Criti cifm abuse it , and become its Nufance . Her frequently ...
... God . The Good - nature alfo of Longinus muft not pass without notice . He bore an Aver- fion to the Sneers and Cavils of those , who , unequal to the weighty Province of Criti cifm abuse it , and become its Nufance . Her frequently ...
Seite xxiii
... God . To contend as fome do that he never read Mo- fes , is trifling , or rather litigious . The Greek Tranflation had been difperfed throughout the Roman Empire long before the time in which he lived , and no Man of a ferious , much ...
... God . To contend as fome do that he never read Mo- fes , is trifling , or rather litigious . The Greek Tranflation had been difperfed throughout the Roman Empire long before the time in which he lived , and no Man of a ferious , much ...
Seite xxiv
... God even whilst he was on Earth , when the Inhabitants of Ly- ftra would have facrificed to him ? Let his Writings be examined and judged by the feverest Teft of the fevereft Critics , and they cannot be found deficient ; nay , they ...
... God even whilst he was on Earth , when the Inhabitants of Ly- ftra would have facrificed to him ? Let his Writings be examined and judged by the feverest Teft of the fevereft Critics , and they cannot be found deficient ; nay , they ...
Seite xxviii
... Gods of his idolatrous Countrymen into Ridi- cule , he could hardly have taken a better Me → thod . Yet what he has faid has never been un derstood in that light ; and tho ' the whole may be allegorical , as his Commentators would fain ...
... Gods of his idolatrous Countrymen into Ridi- cule , he could hardly have taken a better Me → thod . Yet what he has faid has never been un derstood in that light ; and tho ' the whole may be allegorical , as his Commentators would fain ...
Seite 2
... natural to yourself . For well did the Sage answer the Queftion , In what do we most resemble the Gods ? when he re- plied , In doing Good and Speaking Truth . But * fince * Pythagoras . fince I write , my dear Friend , to you 2 LONGINUS.
... natural to yourself . For well did the Sage answer the Queftion , In what do we most resemble the Gods ? when he re- plied , In doing Good and Speaking Truth . But * fince * Pythagoras . fince I write , my dear Friend , to you 2 LONGINUS.
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Æneid againſt alfo almoſt Amphicrates Anſwer Aurelian Beauty becauſe Befides beſt Cauſe Cenfure Cicero cloſe Compofition courſe defcribed Demofthenes Deſcription Difcourfe divine Eupolis Euripides excellent Expreffions exprefs Eyes faid fame fays feems felf fhall fhew fhort fhould fide Figure fince fions fome fometimes fpeak ftill ftrikes fucceeded fuch Genius grand Grandeur greateſt Heav'n Herodotus himſelf Homer Honour Hyperbaton Hyperbole Hyperides Ifocrates Iliad Images Imitation Inftance itſelf Judgment juft laft loft Longinus Lyfias manner meaſure Mind moft moſt muft muſt Nature nefs never noble Number Obfervation Orator Paffage Paffion paſs Pathetic Pearce Perfon Philofopher Phrynicus Plato Pleaſure Plutarch Poet Pomp prefent Quintilian raiſe Reafon Refemblance ſay SECT SECTION ſeems Senfe Sophocles Soul ſpeak Spirit Stile ſtrong Sublime Suidas thee thefe themſelves Theopompus theſe things thofe thoſe thou Thought thro Thucydides tion Tranflation Treatife uſe whofe Words Writers Xenophon Zenobia