| Gay Wilson Allen, Harry Hayden Clark - 1962 - 676 страници
...distorted. The parts of a composition may be poetical, without the 6Cf. Sidney's Defense of Poesie: "The historian, wanting the precept, is so tied, not to...general reason of things, that his example draweth no necessary consequence." composition as a whole being a poem.7 A single sentence may be considered as... | |
| Donald Ahern, Robert Shenk - 1984 - 128 страници
...who may understand him, and more happy that can apply what he doth understand. On the other side, the historian, wanting the precept, is so tied not to...general reason of things, that his example draweth no necessary consequence, and therefore a less fruitful doctrine. Now doth the peerless poet perform both;... | |
| Philip Sidney - 1983 - 580 страници
...who may understand him, and more happy that can apply what he doth understand. On the other side, the historian, wanting the precept, is so tied, not to...general reason of things, that his example draweth no necessary consequence, and therefore a less fruitful doctrine. Now doth the peerless poet perform both:... | |
| James Boyd White - 1985 - 328 страници
...who may understand him, and more happy that can apply what he doth understand. On the other side, the historian, wanting the precept, is so tied, not to...general reason of things, that his example draweth no necessary consequence, and therefore a less fruitful doctrine. Now doth the peerless poet perform both... | |
| George Alexander Kennedy, Glyn P. Norton - 1989 - 790 страници
...general', the philosopher expresses his 'bare rule' harshly and obscurely in 'thorny argument', while 'the historian, wanting the precept, is so tied, not to...general reason of things, that his example draweth no necessary consequence' (105.8-107.8). Now the poet 'coupleth the general notion with the particular... | |
| David Simpson - 1995 - 218 страници
...literature — and the contiguous disciplines of history and philosophy The historian is tied to "example, " to "the particular truth of things and not to the general reason of things " The philosopher, on the contrary, moves by 18 I am thinking here of Jane Tompkins's now widely circulated... | |
| Wayne Erickson - 1996 - 168 страници
...the new scientific or empirical historian, who, ''being captived to the truth of a foolish world" and "wanting the precept, is so tied, not to what should...general reason of things, that his example draweth no necessary consequence, and therefore a less fruitful doctrine."17 The former fulfills his duty as teacher... | |
| Blair Worden, William Worden - 1996 - 444 страници
...Defence teases 'the historian', who is 'laden with mouse-eaten old records'. He cannot teach, being 'so tied, not to what should be but to what is, to...general reason of things, that his example draweth no necessary consequence'. Lacking philosophy, he can deliver only 'example', not 'precept': lacking imagination,... | |
| Paul Budra, Paul Vincent Budra - 2000 - 148 страници
...anticipating the criticism of the historian that Sir Philip Sidney levelled in his Defence ofPoesie: that he 'is so tied, not to what should be, but to what is,...necessarie consequence, and therefore a lesse fruitfull doctrine.'24 For Baldwin, as for Boccaccio, the accumulation of the particular truth of things would,... | |
| Hinrik Schünemann - 2000 - 542 страници
...may understand him, and more happy that can apply what he doth unÜerstand. On the other side, the historian, wanting the precept, is so tied, not to...general reason of things, that his example draweth no necessary consequence, and therefore a less fruitful doctrine." 537 Vgl. Anmerkung 280. Vgl. auch Anmerkung... | |
| |