Poems and Prose of John DrydenPenguin Books, 1955 - 356 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 40
Sivu 159
... stage on which it is represented being but one and the same place , it is unnatural to conceive it many , and those ... stage is so supplied with persons that it is never empty all the time : he who enters second has business with him ...
... stage on which it is represented being but one and the same place , it is unnatural to conceive it many , and those ... stage is so supplied with persons that it is never empty all the time : he who enters second has business with him ...
Sivu 181
... stage as will force us on that rock , because we see they are seldom listened to by the audience , and that is many times the ruin of the play ; for , being once let pass without attention , the audience can never recover them- selves ...
... stage as will force us on that rock , because we see they are seldom listened to by the audience , and that is many times the ruin of the play ; for , being once let pass without attention , the audience can never recover them- selves ...
Sivu 188
... stage to justify . As for their new way of mingling mirth with serious plot , I do not with Lisideius condemn the thing , though I cannot approve their manner of doing it . He tells us we cannot so speedily recollect our- selves after a ...
... stage to justify . As for their new way of mingling mirth with serious plot , I do not with Lisideius condemn the thing , though I cannot approve their manner of doing it . He tells us we cannot so speedily recollect our- selves after a ...
Sisältö
INTRODUCTION | 7 |
PROLOGUE TO THE TEMPEST 1670 | 97 |
PROLOGUE AND EPILOGUE TO THE UNIVERSITY | 104 |
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Absalom ABSALOM AND ACHITOPHEL Achitophel ancients ARIMANT Aristotle arms AURENG-ZEBE beauty Ben Jonson betwixt blank verse blessed Chaucer CHAWN comedy crime Crites crowd crown cursed dare David death DIANET disdain Dryden Edmund Berry Godfrey EMPEROR English Eugenius ev'n ev'ry eyes fame fate father fear foes fortune French give grace hate heart heav'n honour humour INDAMORA Jebusites Jonson judgement kind King laws Lisideius live Lord Mac Flecknoe MELESINDA mind MORAT muse nature ne'er never NOURMAHAL numbers o'er Ovid pains passion peace pity play pleasure Plot poem poesy poet Popish Plot pow'r praise prince reason reign rhyme Sanhedrin satire scene sense Shadwell Shadwell's Shakespeare shun Silent Woman soul speak stage thee Thomas Shadwell thou thought throne Titus Oates tragedy truth twas Virgil virtue words writ write youth