The Science of Discourse: A Rhetoric for High Schools and Colleges |
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Page 45
... imagination and the judgment intently active relating into one idea all the others . The difference between readers is great ; and it lies chiefly in the power of organizing details into unity . One tries to hold everything , and ...
... imagination and the judgment intently active relating into one idea all the others . The difference between readers is great ; and it lies chiefly in the power of organizing details into unity . One tries to hold everything , and ...
Page 54
... imagination as pictured wholes ; after which their deeper thought unity may be penetrated . - The Further guidance for presenting the individual is obtained from noting that each individual has parts which coexist in space and parts ...
... imagination as pictured wholes ; after which their deeper thought unity may be penetrated . - The Further guidance for presenting the individual is obtained from noting that each individual has parts which coexist in space and parts ...
Page 57
... imagination is not required to bound the class unit , as it is required to do with the organic unit . As the organic unit has two aspects , so has the class unit . Class unity consists , as we have seen , in the relation of the parts ...
... imagination is not required to bound the class unit , as it is required to do with the organic unit . As the organic unit has two aspects , so has the class unit . Class unity consists , as we have seen , in the relation of the parts ...
Page 61
... imagination , language has more than a compensating advantage . While it is possible to paint or to sculpture all parts of the human body , the functional relation of each to life , as inter- preted by the judgment , can be expressed in ...
... imagination , language has more than a compensating advantage . While it is possible to paint or to sculpture all parts of the human body , the functional relation of each to life , as inter- preted by the judgment , can be expressed in ...
Page 67
... imagination at once with a general conception of the whole . To state that a man is old carries with it gray hairs , dim eyes , feeble voice , palsied limbs , and clouded memory . To know that a church has stood for a hundred years ...
... imagination at once with a general conception of the whole . To state that a man is old carries with it gray hairs , dim eyes , feeble voice , palsied limbs , and clouded memory . To know that a church has stood for a hundred years ...
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Common terms and phrases
adaptation Allegory Amphibrach Anapaest apple argument Asyndeton attention attri basis beauty called cause and effect clear common comparison and contrast composer conception condition connection conscious copula definite desire distinct effort Elegance elements emotions end sought energy essential euphony exposition fact feeling figure force given gives growing on trees guage hearer Hence idea ideal identity imagination impression individual induction inferred interpretation judgment language form law of unity liquid consonants literal literary logical means ment Metaphor Metonymy mind addressed move movement narration nature object oration oratory organic organic unity periodic sentence phases Pleonasm poem poetry Polysyndeton presented preter principle produced prose purpose reader reading relation requires resemblance rhetoric secured selection sense sentence Sir Launfal sound speak speaker style syllable syllogism Synecdoche Tautology tences theme things thought tion Trochee truth unified unit utterance vincing power whole words writer