© 2015 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston. This article traces the emergence and evolution of 'rhetoric' as a historical key term of metaliterary discourse. In the modernist period, the term 'rhetoric' was given a conspicuously central role in the heated debate over literary style and its relation to ordinary language, not incidentally after rhetoric's fall from grace as an academic discipline over the course of the 19th century. Scores of writers (e. g. Symons, Yeats, Hofmannsthal, Gourmont, Pound, Eliot) attacked 'rhetoric,' variously (and often vaguely) defined as convoluted poetic diction, moralistic or political preaching, and meaningless abstraction. Yet, the broader cultural context in which this anti-rhetorical discourse was situ...