The Hyacinth Room: An Investigation Into the Nature of Comedy, Tragedy, & TragicomedyKnopf, 1964 - 317 стор. |
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Сторінка 209
... moral harmony and spiritual ascendance , is set over against the moral chaos , the unreason , and the physical dissolution that appear , in their several degrees , to prevail . All of which would seem to make a sufficient travesty of ...
... moral harmony and spiritual ascendance , is set over against the moral chaos , the unreason , and the physical dissolution that appear , in their several degrees , to prevail . All of which would seem to make a sufficient travesty of ...
Сторінка 218
... moral context of both the tragedy and the comedy of the period , has been demonstrated by G. K. Hunter . The frankly disenchanted gaze which the English Machiavel turns on human nature ; the conviction that , in the private sphere of ...
... moral context of both the tragedy and the comedy of the period , has been demonstrated by G. K. Hunter . The frankly disenchanted gaze which the English Machiavel turns on human nature ; the conviction that , in the private sphere of ...
Сторінка 253
... moral standards which are incompatible with the standards of animals , Jean replies that man must go beyond moral standards , that nature has its own laws and that morality is against nature , that life must be built on new foundations ...
... moral standards which are incompatible with the standards of animals , Jean replies that man must go beyond moral standards , that nature has its own laws and that morality is against nature , that life must be built on new foundations ...
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The Widow of Ephesus | 3 |
Navarre and His Bookmen | 21 |
Crispin and Leandro | 41 |
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acceptance according action appears aspirations bears beauty become beginning better bring brought characters close comedy comes comic concerned contradiction course daughter death desire drama dream earth edited effect effort Elizabethan Euripides evident evil experience face fact faith fall father feel final folly give goes Gregers Hamlet hand happiness heaven Hialmar human Ibid ideal illusion imagination incongruity irony Jacobean keep kind King Lady less live look lovers madness man's manner means Measure merely mind nature never once pass passion past person Plautus play present Press principal question rational reality reason regularly says scene seeking seems sense Signora soul speaks spirit suffering things tion tragedy tragic translated true truth turn virtue vision Volpone whole wife witness woman young