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Show 106 indirection stands between the reader and some the or stark criticism; for there must be pleasure for the reader if he is to read on the reading, be convinced of the r i vJhat is utile must also be ght nc s s interest an, trouh i.t.e r wr "s dulce.L2 She points ----- that out related figures: sometimes parody, the most Erasmus' in particularly its . the of heaping allegories examples, of us the bolie way; through irony oldest and indirect to indirection, made to that urbanity, or of those implied of in to fables. is "daring" ridicule. the wrong for just as ridiculous. authoritative and some be a coarse (who are humour," and a This quality is not epithets of to in hyper- a The meta made are One, the is mighty, ironically simple Its with are that the by to is the education, low in the very style no undesirability say that themselves) plain, country drudge The (which sees The Geneva that cast of Through reasons "brave" rags. place reader are) quickly is "lecherous eloquence. chosen. and irony incongruity, contemptuous, unhandsome. they attribute object effect most and quite undesirable: sullen, extreme, like appear dressed appear is takes intelligent we facilely chosen by church too compared to supposedly pathetically and the assume phoric "churches" chosen is secular values on courtly-valorous adventurer the writings, hyperbole, litotes, little all Donne makes didactic indirection, fiction. Donne's attack chiefly through effective to diction, the churches |