On the Sublime/Analysis
ANALYSIS
The Treatise on the Sublime may be divided into six Parts, as follows:—
II.—cc. iii-v. [The beginning lost.] Vices of Style opposed to the Sublime: Affectation, Bombast, False Sentiment, Frigid Conceits. The cause of such defects.
III.—cc. vi, vii. The true Sublime, what it is, and how distinguishable.
IV.—cc. viii-xl. Five Sources of the Sublime (how Sublimity is related to Passion, c. viii, §§ 2-4).
- a. As the natural outcome of nobility of soul.
Examples (c. ix).
- a. As the natural outcome of nobility of soul.
- b. Choice of the most striking circumstances.
Sappho’s Ode (c. x).
- b. Choice of the most striking circumstances.
- e. Imagery (c. xv).
(iii.) Figures of Speech (cc. xvi-xxix).
b. Rhetorical Question (c. xviii).
d. Hyperbaton (c. xxii).
e. Changes of Number, Person, Tense, etc. (cc. xxiii-xxvii).
(iv.) Graceful Expression (cc. xxx-xxxii and xxxvii, xxxviii).
b. Ornaments of Style (cc. xxxi, xxxii and xxxvii, xxxviii).
(β) Metaphors; accumulated; extract from the Timaeus; abuse of Metaphors; certain tasteless conceits blamed in Plato (c. xxxii).
(γ) Comparisons and Similes [lost] (c. xxxvii).
(δ) Hyperbole (c. xxxviii).
(i.) Abuse of Rhythm (ii.) Broken and Jerky Clauses (cc. xli, xlii). (iii.) Undue Prolixity xliii).(iv.) Improper Use of Familiar Words. Anti-climax. Example from Theopompus (c.