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Isidore of Seville Isocrates
James I James VI Jerome John of Garland John of Salisbury Jonson, Ben Julian
Kechermann
Lactantius Langhorne Lipisius Livy Lodge Lombardus, B.
Longinus Loyola Lucan Lucian Lucretius Lydgate, John Lyly, John Lyndesay, David.
Lysias
Maggi Martial Martia.n.u.s Capella Mazzoni Melanchthon Menander Menenius Agrippa Milton Minturno
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Newman, J.H.
Norden, Eduard North, Sir Thomas
Origen Overbury, Thomas Ovid
Palmieri Pazzi Peacham, Henry Petrarch Piccolomini Pico della Mirandola Plato Plautus Pliny Plutarch Poggio Ponta.n.u.s, Jacob p.r.i.c.kard, A. O.
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Tacitus Ta.s.so, B.
Tatian Terence Tertullian Theognis of Rhegium Theon Theophilus Theophrastus Themistocles Thomas Aquinas Thomasin von Zirclaria Tifernas Timocles
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Footnotes:
[1] _Modern Philology_, Vol. XVI, No. 8, Dec., 1918.
[2] _Poetics_, I, 8.
[3] _Quomodo historia conscribenda sit_, 8.
[4] _De inst.i.tutione oratoria_, X, ii, 21.
[5] _Poetik, Rhetorik, und Stilistik_ (Halle, 1886), pp. 14, 261.
[6] _Poetry, with Reference to Aristotle's Poetics_, Ed. A.S. Cook (Boston, 1891), pp. 10-11.
[7] _Estetica_ (Milano, 1902), I, II, and appendix.
[8] _Enjoyment of Poetry_ (New York, 1916), p. 66.
[9] Georges Renard, _La method scientifique de l'histoire litteraire_.
(Paris, 1900), p. 385.
[10] III, 1.
[11] I, 8; and IX, 2.
[12] p.r.i.c.kard thinks Aristotle misread in this pa.s.sage. According to p.r.i.c.kard, Aristotle means that poetry must be in meter, but that not all meter is poetry. Aristotle's _Poetics_, p. 60. Most critics do not share p.r.i.c.kard's opinion.
[13] _Ibid._, I, 6.
[14] _Ibid._, IV, 2.
[15] _Psychology_, ed. E. Wallace, III, 3, cf. also introd., p. 77, ff.
[16] _Poetics_, I.
[17] VII, 3.
[18] VII, 5.
[19] S.H. Butcher, _Aristotle's Theory of Poetry and Fine Art_, p. 123.
Poetics, II, 1.
[20] III, 1.
[21] _Ibid._, IX.
[22] _Ibid._, IX, 3-4; of. XV, 6.
[23] _Ibid._, X, 3.
[24] _Ibid._, XXIV, 9-10.