| |
| | IX. On Reading the Bible (II). Quiller-Couch, Sir Arthur. 1920. On the Art of Reading |
 | | Till now, I was acquainted only with two ways of criticising a beautiful passage: the one, to show, by an exact anatomy of it, the distinct beauties of it, and whence they sprung; the other, an idle exclamation, or a general encomium, which leaves nothing behind it. |
 | | And for rapture the sea was disparted, and onward the car-steeds flew. |
 | | Why, very strangelyvery strangely indeed, whether you take the treatise to be by that Longinus, the Rhetorician and Zenobias adviser, whom the Emperor Aurelian put to death, or prefer to believe it the work of an unknown hand in the first century. |
| www.bartleby.com /191/9.html (3673 words) |
|