Rhetorical Analyses of Literary WorksEdward P. J. Corbett |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 10
Page 4
... hate with hate againe retaliate ; But thou wilt lose the stile of conquerour , If I , thy conquest , perish by thy hate . Then , least my being nothing lessen thee , If thou hate mee , take heed of hating mee . Yet , love and hate mee ...
... hate with hate againe retaliate ; But thou wilt lose the stile of conquerour , If I , thy conquest , perish by thy hate . Then , least my being nothing lessen thee , If thou hate mee , take heed of hating mee . Yet , love and hate mee ...
Page 9
... hate him , but the hate of which he speaks is the hate that would arise from her exulting in the fact that she has brought him to his knees . He is completely at her mercy , and once she takes " too much triumph in the Victorie , " her ...
... hate him , but the hate of which he speaks is the hate that would arise from her exulting in the fact that she has brought him to his knees . He is completely at her mercy , and once she takes " too much triumph in the Victorie , " her ...
Page 12
... hating mee " discretive axiom " Then , least . take heed of hating mee " " love and hate mee too " disjunctive axiom " Lest ... love and hate mee too " It would appear that a rhetorical analysis of this poem is useful in exploring the ...
... hating mee " discretive axiom " Then , least . take heed of hating mee " " love and hate mee too " disjunctive axiom " Lest ... love and hate mee too " It would appear that a rhetorical analysis of this poem is useful in exploring the ...
Contents
A Rhetorical Analysis | 16 |
ARRANGEMENT | 53 |
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire | 86 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Abraham Fraunce aesthetic Andrew Marvell Apologia appear Arbuthnot argument Aristotle audience believe Caesar carpe diem cause chapter character Christian Church Colin Clout Coy Mistress Deist devices diction discourse Donne Donne's dramatic Dryden effect Elder Olson elocutio Emma Emma's emotional ence English enthymeme epideictic Epistle Essays established example figures Frank Churchill Fraunce Gibbon grammatical hate mee imagery irony James James's Jane Austen judgment Kenneth Burke kind Knightley lines literary logic lovers lyric Marvell's meaning ment metaphor mimesis mind mode of criticism modern moral Newman's novel object paragraph passage person persuasion PMLA poem poet poetic poetry Pope Pope's praise present principle proof prose Ramist readers reason Religio Laici religious Renaissance rhetorical analysis rhetorical criticism rhetorical structure rhetorician Satire says sense sentence speaker speech Spenser stanza statement Strether's style stylistic suggest Swift syntactical things thought tion truth verse virtue words writing