Panegyric: Difference between revisions
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A '''panegyric''' (Gk 'pertaining to public assembly' | A '''panegyric''' (Gk 'pertaining to public assembly' (Cuddon 632) is a poem or speech of public praise, usually for a person of renown (e.g., the king, a minister of state, a war hero). | ||
"Originally panegyric was a branch of rhetoric whose rules were laid down in the rhetorical works of Menander and Hermogenes. Scaliger also provides its rules in ''Poetics Libri Septem'' (1561) | "Originally panegyric was a branch of rhetoric whose rules were laid down in the rhetorical works of Menander and Hermogenes. Scaliger also provides its rules in ''Poetics Libri Septem'' (1561)" (ibid.). | ||
See also [[Restoration]] Culture/Session 10. | See also [[Restoration]] Culture/Session 10. | ||
Revision as of 11:02, 6 November 2009
A panegyric (Gk 'pertaining to public assembly' (Cuddon 632) is a poem or speech of public praise, usually for a person of renown (e.g., the king, a minister of state, a war hero). "Originally panegyric was a branch of rhetoric whose rules were laid down in the rhetorical works of Menander and Hermogenes. Scaliger also provides its rules in Poetics Libri Septem (1561)" (ibid.). See also Restoration Culture/Session 10.
Examples from Classical times
- festival oration by Isocrates (436-338 BC) at the Olympic Games in 380
- Pliny the Younger's (AD 61-c.113) euology on Trajan
Examples from Renaissance and Restoration times
- Mark Antony's funeral oration in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar (1599) (ibid.)
- John Dryden, Astraea Redux. A Poem on the Happy Restoration and Return of his Sacred Majesty Charles the Second (1660)
- John Dryden, Annus Mirabilis (1666)
- John Dryden, Threnodia Augustalis (1685)
- Nahum Tate, Come Ye Sons of Art (1694)
Sources
Cuddon, J.A., ed. The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory. Penguin Reference: London, 1999.