The academie of eloquence containing a compleat English rhetorique, exemplified with common-places and formes digested into an easie and methodical way to speak and write fluently according to the mode of the present times : together with letters both amorous and moral upon emergent occasions / by Tho. Blount, Gent.

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Title
The academie of eloquence containing a compleat English rhetorique, exemplified with common-places and formes digested into an easie and methodical way to speak and write fluently according to the mode of the present times : together with letters both amorous and moral upon emergent occasions / by Tho. Blount, Gent.
Author
Blount, Thomas, 1618-1679.
Publication
London :: Printed by T.N. for Humphrey Moseley ...,
1654.
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Subject terms
English language -- Rhetoric -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A28452.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The academie of eloquence containing a compleat English rhetorique, exemplified with common-places and formes digested into an easie and methodical way to speak and write fluently according to the mode of the present times : together with letters both amorous and moral upon emergent occasions / by Tho. Blount, Gent." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A28452.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 15, 2024.

Pages

Page 91

Nature.

NAture is that Spirit or Divine Reason, which is the efficient cause of natural works, &c.

—You whom nature hath made to be the Load-star of comfort, be not the rock of ship∣wrack.

The errors in his nature were excused, by reason of the greenness of his youth.

Nature having done so much for him of nothing, as that it made him Lord of something.

Nature is the mirror of Art.

—They wrastled with the disadvantage of sin∣gle nature, and at last threw it into rule.

—Then does Art appear perfect, when she can scarce be distinguished from Nature it self, and again, nature is ever happy, because she always carries a hidden Art in her own bosom. Longinus.

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