The Classic Line: A Study in Epic PoetryFocusing particular attention on "Beowulf", "Roland", the "Cid", the "Iliad", the "Odyssey", the "Aeneid", the "Divine comedy", and "Paradise lost", the author examines the formal rhetorical and syntactical features in these poems. |
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Page 163
... rhetorical effect . They come at the key point , at the introduction of the middle term between two opposing statements , underscoring that the epigrammatist cannot blink the fact ( which pou resists fixing on ) of a friend's now being ...
... rhetorical effect . They come at the key point , at the introduction of the middle term between two opposing statements , underscoring that the epigrammatist cannot blink the fact ( which pou resists fixing on ) of a friend's now being ...
Page 168
... rhetorical in his address to the Lesbia whose real name never enters the poem . It is just Catullus , personal as he is , who translates Callimachus ' Berenice , and literally . All poetry , through the invincible abstractness of its ...
... rhetorical in his address to the Lesbia whose real name never enters the poem . It is just Catullus , personal as he is , who translates Callimachus ' Berenice , and literally . All poetry , through the invincible abstractness of its ...
Page 175
... rhetorical argument . Darkness in women is beautiful because it is so in such dark flowers as hyacinth , violet , and moon - clover . The rhetorical argument happens to be explicit here , but it is always implicit . The artifice ...
... rhetorical argument . Darkness in women is beautiful because it is so in such dark flowers as hyacinth , violet , and moon - clover . The rhetorical argument happens to be explicit here , but it is always implicit . The artifice ...
Contents
Folk Destinies | 3 |
The Signal Fires | 49 |
The Man of Many Turns | 120 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
abstract accents Achaeans Achilles action Adam Aeneas Aeneid Agamemnon Alexandrian allegorical analogy angels ballad battle become Beowulf caesura Callimachus Catullus character classical comes complex contrast Dante Dante's death destiny diction earth echo Eclogues effect emotional end-stopped epic poem epithet feeling fictive figure fire Georgics give gods half-line Hector Helen hero hero's hexameter Homer human Iliad imagined implied ivory gate language light literal lyric meaning Menelaus metaphor Milton mortality moves mystery myth narrative natural ness Nestor norm Odysseus once pain Paradise Lost particular Patroklos pattern Phaeacians physical poem's poet poetic poetry precision present Priam Propertius Purgatory refined style rhetorical rhyme rhythm rhythmic Roland Satan Scyld sense shepherd simile simple single souls speaks speech spiritual stands statement structure syllables syntactic syntax Theocritus tion transcends Trojans trope Troy umbrae Unferth verb Vergil Vergilian verse voice weeping whole words wounded Zeus