Dramatic Essays of the Neoclassic AgeHenry Hitch Adams, Baxter Hathaway Columbia University Press, 1950 - 412 pages A collection of critical dramatic essays from the neoclassic period beginning in 1660 with the Restoration period in England and the influence of French neoclassic ideas. Includes essays from Pierre Corneille, John Dryden, Saint-Evremond, John Milton, and others. |
Contents
PIERRE CORNEILLE | 1 |
THOMAS SHADWELL | 35 |
VSAINTÉVREMOND | 102 |
Copyright | |
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action actors admiration Æsop Ancients appear Aristotle audience beauty believe Ben Jonson blank verse Bywater characters Chorus Cinna comedy compassion Corneille Corneille's Crites criticism delight discourse distress drama Dryden effect emotion English epic Euripides example excite fable father faults fear feel Fletcher Freem French genius give Greek happen heart hero Horace Humour Iago ideas imagination imitation John Dryden Jonson judge kind Le Cid Lisideius lover mind misfortune Molière moral Nature never Nicomède object observed Oedipus pain passions perhaps persons philosopher pity Plautus play pleased pleasure plot poem Poesy poet poetic poetical justice poetry Polyeucte Porus probability prose Racine reason Restoration comedy rhyme ridiculous Rodogune Rules scene sense sentiments Shakespeare Silent Woman Sophocles soul speak spectator stage terror theatre things thought tion tragedy tragic true Unity verse virtue virtuous words writ writing