The Hyacinth Room: An Investigation Into the Nature of Comedy, Tragedy, & TragicomedyKnopf, 1964 - 317 стор. |
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Результати 1-3 із 45
Сторінка 46
... true of Pentheus , it is true of Heracles , 2 it is true in a special sense of Helen , and it is true of Creusa . If men and women in Euripides are not shown as they ought to be in any ideal sense , they are shown as they themselves ...
... true of Pentheus , it is true of Heracles , 2 it is true in a special sense of Helen , and it is true of Creusa . If men and women in Euripides are not shown as they ought to be in any ideal sense , they are shown as they themselves ...
Сторінка 124
... true judge ; and Mammon , lamenting the forfeiture of his hopes through intemperance , is but a travesty of the true penitent . Even his hopes are the merest travesties of real ones , for they have been without foundation from the ...
... true judge ; and Mammon , lamenting the forfeiture of his hopes through intemperance , is but a travesty of the true penitent . Even his hopes are the merest travesties of real ones , for they have been without foundation from the ...
Сторінка 144
... true happiness lies elsewhere . Elmire sug- gests that his true happiness lies in heaven where his thoughts are presumably fixed , earthly things holding no pleasure for him . To which Tartuffe replies that his heart is not made of ...
... true happiness lies elsewhere . Elmire sug- gests that his true happiness lies in heaven where his thoughts are presumably fixed , earthly things holding no pleasure for him . To which Tartuffe replies that his heart is not made of ...
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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