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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1893. Excerpt: ... the king's point of view, offers a popular plea for Monarchy as against Republic. Here Isocrates is essentially the professional rhetor--it being distinctive of Rhetoric as an art that, like its counterpart Dialectic, it is equally ready to argue either side of a question.1 Isocrates has given us the other side in the Panathenaicus and the Areopagiticus, where he interprets his own ideal--a democracy tempered by a censorship. II. Displays 1. Busiris. Or. xi.--The Busiris and the En-n. 1. comium on Helen Or. x. are slight essays by BuMnsIsocrates in a province which was not his own. Declamations on subjects taken from epos or from the myths had always a prominent place among the "displays " of ordinary Sophists. Such, for instance, are the Encomium on Helen and the Defence of Palamedes ascribed to Gorgias; the speech of Odysseus Against Palamedes ascribed to Alcidamas; the speeches of Ajax and Odysseus, in the contest for the arms, ascribed to Antisthenes.2 The bent of Purpose Isocrates, as he himself tells us,3 was not towards this fBusiris" kind of composition. He was not, indeed, hostile to lucrative, it, any more than he was hostile to criticism of the poets and other branches of literary work which employed the Sophists.4 The encomia which he depreciates in Or. x. § 12 are encomia on bumble-bees and salt; on the other hand, he expressly commends 1 Tavtwrla trvWoylferau, At. Rhet. 4 Cf. Antid. § 45. In Panatk. L 1. §§ 19 ff. ho shows how much he. „ t,„,, had been nettled by the charge of See above, p. 52, note 1.,.,. „...,... r depreciating all kinds of literary Panath. § 1. work except his own. the choice of such a subject as Helen (§ 14); and if he speaks of Busiris as a poor theme (Or. XI. § 22)...
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1893. Excerpt: ... the king's point of view, offers a popular plea for Monarchy as against Republic. Here Isocrates is essentially the professional rhetor--it being distinctive of Rhetoric as an art that, like its counterpart Dialectic, it is equally ready to argue either side of a question.1 Isocrates has given us the other side in the Panathenaicus and the Areopagiticus, where he interprets his own ideal--a democracy tempered by a censorship. II. Displays 1. Busiris. Or. xi.--The Busiris and the En-n. 1. comium on Helen Or. x. are slight essays by BuMnsIsocrates in a province which was not his own. Declamations on subjects taken from epos or from the myths had always a prominent place among the "displays " of ordinary Sophists. Such, for instance, are the Encomium on Helen and the Defence of Palamedes ascribed to Gorgias; the speech of Odysseus Against Palamedes ascribed to Alcidamas; the speeches of Ajax and Odysseus, in the contest for the arms, ascribed to Antisthenes.2 The bent of Purpose Isocrates, as he himself tells us,3 was not towards this fBusiris" kind of composition. He was not, indeed, hostile to lucrative, it, any more than he was hostile to criticism of the poets and other branches of literary work which employed the Sophists.4 The encomia which he depreciates in Or. x. § 12 are encomia on bumble-bees and salt; on the other hand, he expressly commends 1 Tavtwrla trvWoylferau, At. Rhet. 4 Cf. Antid. § 45. In Panatk. L 1. §§ 19 ff. ho shows how much he. „ t,„,, had been nettled by the charge of See above, p. 52, note 1.,.,. „...,... r depreciating all kinds of literary Panath. § 1. work except his own. the choice of such a subject as Helen (§ 14); and if he speaks of Busiris as a poor theme (Or. XI. § 22)...
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