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Page 139
between comedy and tragedy are these : the characters of tragedy are semidivine , leaders of the state , kings ; those of comedy are unimportant and private persons . The subjects of tragedy are woes , exiles , deaths ; of comedy ...
between comedy and tragedy are these : the characters of tragedy are semidivine , leaders of the state , kings ; those of comedy are unimportant and private persons . The subjects of tragedy are woes , exiles , deaths ; of comedy ...
Page 150
tragedies are little praised by Aristotle ( though some think otherwise ) double structure is nonetheless to be much praised in comedy and has made the plays of Terence succeed wonderfully . I call that plot double which has in its ...
tragedies are little praised by Aristotle ( though some think otherwise ) double structure is nonetheless to be much praised in comedy and has made the plays of Terence succeed wonderfully . I call that plot double which has in its ...
Page 196
It is a pastoral tragi - comedy , which the people seeing when it was played , having ever had a singular gift in defining , concluded to be a play of country hired shepherds in gray cloaks , with curtailed dogs in strings , sometimes ...
It is a pastoral tragi - comedy , which the people seeing when it was played , having ever had a singular gift in defining , concluded to be a play of country hired shepherds in gray cloaks , with curtailed dogs in strings , sometimes ...
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Contents
Introduction by J V Cunningham page | 11 |
Queen Elizabeth at Greenwich | 17 |
Julius Caesar at the Globe 1599 | 27 |
Copyright | |
26 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
action answer appear bear begin better bring brought called cause character comedy comes common continued Court daughter death delight doth earl effect England English evil example excellent expression fable fact fall fear feel follow force fortune friends gentlemen give Hamlet hand hath Henry honor idea imitation John kind King less live London Lord manner matter means mind moral nature never night observed once passions persons pity Plautus play players poet present Prince produce Queen reason Received rest Richard scene seems seen sense sent Shakespeare sort speak speech stage stand story taken things Thomas thou thought tion tragedy tragic true truth turn unto whole