| John Milton - 1896 - 252 pages
...Phalereus, Cicero, Hermogenes, Longinus. To which poetry would be made subsequent, or indeed rather precedent, as being less subtile and fine, but more simple, sensuous, and passionate. I mean not here the prosody of a verse, which they could not but have hit on before among the rudiments... | |
| Matthew Arnold - English essays - 1897 - 460 pages
...Education : " To which [/. e. logic and rhetoric] poetry would be made subsequent, or indeed rather precedent, as being less subtile and fine, but more simple, sensuous, and passionate." Prose Works, London, 1806, i. 281. 272 : 10. — So nigh is grandeur. The last lines of the third of... | |
| John Milton - English poetry - 1901 - 418 pages
...Phalereus, Cicero, Hermagenes, Longinus. To which poetry would be made subsequent, or indeed rather precedent, as being less subtile and fine, but more simple, sensuous, and passionate.' And this leads us directly to the other element of the Miltonic quality, the sense of loftiness. Here... | |
| John Milton - English poetry - 1901 - 416 pages
...Phalereus, Cicero, Hermagenes, Longinus. To which poetry would be made subsequent, or indeed rather precedent, as being less subtile and fine, but more simple, sensuous, and passionate.' And this leads us directly to the other element of the Miltonic quality, the sense of loftiness. Here... | |
| Francis Burdett Money-Coutts - Bible - 1903 - 330 pages
...Logic, therefore, so much as is useful . . . To which Poetry would be made subsequent, or indeed rather precedent, as being less subtile and fine, but more simple, sensuous, and passionate. . . . That sublime art which in Aristotle's Poetics, in Horace, and the Italian commentaries of Castelvetro,... | |
| JOHN MASEFIELD - 1907 - 550 pages
...Phalereus, Cicero, Hermogenes, Longinus. To which poetry would be made subsequent, or, indeed, rather precedent, as being less subtile and fine, but more simple, sensuous, and passionate ; I mean not here the prosody of a verse, which they could not but have hit on before among the rudiments... | |
| Walter Cochrane Bronson - English poetry - 1909 - 570 pages
...Government, Book II, 1641. "To which flogic and rhetoricf poetry should be made subsequent, or Indeed rather precedent, as being less subtile and fine but more simple, sensuous and passionate. I mean not here the prosody of a verse, which they could not but have hit on before among the rudiments... | |
| Paget Jackson Toynbee - Comparative literature - 1909 - 784 pages
...EDUCATION.2 [Mazzoni's ' Difesa di Dante '] To logic poetry would be made subsequent, ' or indeed rather precedent, as being less subtile and fine, but more simple, sensuous, and passionate. I mean not here the prosody of a verse, which they could not have but hit on before among the rudiments... | |
| John Matthews Manly - English prose literature - 1909 - 570 pages
...Phalereus, Cicero, Hermogenes, Longinus. To which poetry would be made subsequent, or indeed rather precedent, as being less subtile and fine, but more simple, sensuous, and passionate. I mean not here the prosody of a verse, which they could not but have hit on before among the rudiments... | |
| Francis Barton Gummere - English language - 1913 - 280 pages
...proper words are these : " To which [sc. rhetoric] poetry would be made subsequent, or indeed rather precedent, as being less subtile and fine, but more simple, sensuous, and passionate." [See p. 4 of this "Handbook."] On p. 8 it is stated that English " book " is derived from the word... | |
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