The Satires of John Oldham: a Study of Rhetorical Modes in Restoration Verse SatireStanford University, 1967 - 420 sidor |
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Sida 5
... force " by which Dryden felt he was betrayed . It is not merely to be dismissed as a " noble error . " That force consists of a mumber of elements , all related to the apparently unrestrained vigor with which Oldham attacks his subjects ...
... force " by which Dryden felt he was betrayed . It is not merely to be dismissed as a " noble error . " That force consists of a mumber of elements , all related to the apparently unrestrained vigor with which Oldham attacks his subjects ...
Sida 10
... force betray'd " becomes clear , the point being that it is not so much this " force " itself that is wrong but that the most effective and acceptable satire was to be written with another kind of rhetoric than that of " force . " 2 ...
... force betray'd " becomes clear , the point being that it is not so much this " force " itself that is wrong but that the most effective and acceptable satire was to be written with another kind of rhetoric than that of " force . " 2 ...
Sida 69
... force of the invective derives primarily from the formal design of the work , which is the design of the curse . The satire " Upon a Printer " is again another exercise in invective with a literary purpose , but its force does not ...
... force of the invective derives primarily from the formal design of the work , which is the design of the curse . The satire " Upon a Printer " is again another exercise in invective with a literary purpose , but its force does not ...
Innehåll
The Development of Verse Satire | 18 |
John Oldham and the Rhetoric of Emotion | 46 |
The Satyrs upon the Jesuits | 83 |
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Absalom and Achitophel abuse appears Archilochus Artemisa to Chloe attempts Augustan basic beasts Boileau Catiline characterization clever conventional convey critical curse debauchee devices discourse Dithyrambick dramatic monologue drunkard Dryden dull emotional rhetoric English epic evil exaggerated example Fools formal satire formal verse satire framework Garnet Garnet's Ghost give grand style Hell heroic Horace and Juvenal Horatian human folly Ian Jack idea imitation important indignation invective poem ironic hyperbole irony Jesuit villainy John Oldham Juvenal Juvenal's Juvenalian Juvenalian satire kind of satire lampoon lines literary Loyola Lucilius Lycambes MacFlecknoe method narrative nature Oldham's Satyrs panegyric paradox particular periodic sentences philosophical Plot poet poetry political Popish Plot praise Prologue raillery reader reason Restoration rhetoric of emotion rhetorical mode Rochester Rochester's satires Roman Satire III satiric argument satiric attack satirist Satyr against Mankind Satyr against Vertue says subtlety suggests thee theme Timon tone Tunbridge vice writing