English Dramatic Theories, 1. köideM. Niemeyer, 1973 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 12
Page 32
... sense , even sense may imagine , and Art hath taught , and all ancient examples justified , and at this day , the ordinary players in Italy will not err in . Yet will some bring in an example of Ew nuchus in Terence , that containeth ...
... sense , even sense may imagine , and Art hath taught , and all ancient examples justified , and at this day , the ordinary players in Italy will not err in . Yet will some bring in an example of Ew nuchus in Terence , that containeth ...
Page 94
... sense were an offence . Any sudden gust of pas- sion ( as an extasy of love in an unexpected meeting ) cannot better be expressed than in a word and a sigh , breaking one another . Nature is dumb on such occasions ; and to make her ...
... sense were an offence . Any sudden gust of pas- sion ( as an extasy of love in an unexpected meeting ) cannot better be expressed than in a word and a sigh , breaking one another . Nature is dumb on such occasions ; and to make her ...
Page 120
... sense , already prepared to heighten the second : many times the close of the sense falls into the middle of the nex verse , or farther off , and he may often prevail himself of the same advantages in English which Virgil had in Latin ...
... sense , already prepared to heighten the second : many times the close of the sense falls into the middle of the nex verse , or farther off , and he may often prevail himself of the same advantages in English which Virgil had in Latin ...
Contents
An Abridgement of the Notable Work | 5 |
Prologue to Ralph Roister Doister ca 1566 | 11 |
The Art of English Poesy 1589 | 25 |
Copyright | |
9 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action actors Ancients argument Aristotle audience behold Ben Johnson betwixt blank verse Comedy comic compass Corneille Crites Criticism dayes delight discourse doth Drama Dramatic Poesy Dramatic Theories Dramatick Edited English enterludes Epitasi euery Eugenius euill Euripides example excellent father faults Fletcher Francis Beaumont French GEORGE CHAPMAN hath haue hear honour Horace humour imitation John Dryden Johnson judgment kind kings labour language laugh laughter learned Lisideius lively London manner matter mirth Modern Nature never Nicholas Grimald observed passions perfect persons Philip Massinger Plautus players Playes plot poem poets present Prologue reason repr represented rhyme Satyre sayth scenes Sejanus Seneca serious plays Shakespeare shew Silent Woman Sophocles speak speech stage Terence theatre themselues things Thomas Heywood Thomas Marc Parrott thou thought Tragedy tragi-comedy vertue vice virtue vpon vsed wherein whole words writ write