Figure Name | medela |
Source | Silva Rhetoricae (http://humanities.byu.edu/rhetoric/Silva.htm); Peacham 1593 |
Earliest Source | None |
Synonyms | |
Etymology | None |
Type | Chroma |
Linguistic Domain |
Semantic |
Definition |
1. When you can't deny or defend friends' faults and seek to heal them with good words. (Silva Rhetoricae) 2. Medela, when seeing the offences of our friends, or of them whom we defend, to be so great that we cannot honestly defend them, or so manifest that we cannot well deny them, we seeke to heale them with plastures of good words and pleasing pseech. (Peacham) |
Example |
2. When there was a greater luxuritie and ryot objected against Caelius, then Cicero durst defend, and more evident then he could deny: not withstanding he did extenuate the fault with gentle words, and as much as he could pacified the judges, who were vehemently kindled against him, he said that those things were partly the vices of times rather then of the man, he contended that soem thing ought to be yelded to age, he opposeth against the offence a hope of future regard and diligence. And also as a remedie against new sprung envy, by the acts and enterprises which now Caelius tooke upon him, he applieth his own expettation of Caelius modestie and honest behaviour for the time to come. (Peacham) 2. The Apostle Paul giveth a verie good example of this figure in his Epistle to Philemon, where he useth sundry reasons & diverse meanes to salve and cure the fault of Onesimus, and to appease and pacifie the displeasure of Philemon: which example may be a very good president for the use for this figure, both in respect of the forme, and also of the equitie & lawfulnesse of the effect, which are two points necessarie to be observed in all formes of speech. (Peacham) |
Kind Of | |
Part Of | |
Related Figures | figures of pathos, figures of refutation |
Notes | |
Confidence | Unconfident |
Last Editor | Ashley Rose Kelly |
Confidence | Unconfident |
Editorial Notes | |
Reviewed | No |