Dramatic EssaysJ. M. Dent & sons, Limited, 1931 - 299 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 85
Sivu 31
... reason might render him more wary another time , and make him punish himself with harder fare and coarser clothes , to get up again what he had lost : but that he should look on it as a judgment , and so repent , we may expect to hear ...
... reason might render him more wary another time , and make him punish himself with harder fare and coarser clothes , to get up again what he had lost : but that he should look on it as a judgment , and so repent , we may expect to hear ...
Sivu 72
... reason is already overthrown , which was , because both were alike impossible . This is manifestly other- wise ; for it is proved that a stage may properly represent two rooms or houses ; for the imagination being judge of what is ...
... reason is already overthrown , which was , because both were alike impossible . This is manifestly other- wise ; for it is proved that a stage may properly represent two rooms or houses ; for the imagination being judge of what is ...
Sivu 73
... Reason , which will refuse to take the leap , when the distance over it appears too large . If Ben Jonson himself will remove the scene from Rome into Tuscany in the same act , and from thence return to Rome , in the scene which ...
... Reason , which will refuse to take the leap , when the distance over it appears too large . If Ben Jonson himself will remove the scene from Rome into Tuscany in the same act , and from thence return to Rome , in the scene which ...
Sisältö
EPISTLE DEDICATORY TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE CHARLES LORD | 1 |
A DEFENCE OF AN ESSAY OF DRAMATIC POESY | 60 |
ON COMEDY FARCE AND TRAGEDY | 77 |
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acknowledge action admiration Æneas Æneid Æneis amongst ancients argument Aristotle audience Augustus beauties Ben Jonson better betwixt blank verse Boccace Cæsar Catiline character Chaucer comedy commend compass confess Crites critics defend Dido discourse Dramatic Poesy Dryden Duke of Lerma endeavoured English epic Essay Eugenius Euripides excellent expression fancy father faults favour Fletcher French genius Georgics give Grecian Greek hero Homer honour Horace humour imagination imitation invention Italian JOHN DRYDEN Jonson judge judgment Julius Cæsar kind language Latin least Lisideius lived Lord Lordship Lucretius manners modern nature never noble numbers observed opinion Ovid passions perfection persons Pindaric pleased plot poem poet preface prose reader reason rhyme Roman satire scene Segrais Sejanus sense serious plays Shakspeare Silent Woman speak stage suppose Theocritus things thought Tis true tragedy translation Turnus Virgil virtue words writ write