English Dramatic Theories, Volumen1M. Niemeyer, 1973 |
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Página 25
... Poets receaued surnames . ... ] There was another kind of poeme , inuented onely to make port , & to refresh the company with a maner of buffonry or ounterfaiting of merry speaches , conuerting all that which hey had hard spoken before ...
... Poets receaued surnames . ... ] There was another kind of poeme , inuented onely to make port , & to refresh the company with a maner of buffonry or ounterfaiting of merry speaches , conuerting all that which hey had hard spoken before ...
Página 26
... Poets vsed for that purpose , three kinds of poems reprehensiue , to wit , the Satyre , the Comedie , & the Tragedie : and the first and most bitter inuectiue against vice and vicious men , was the Satyre : which to th'intent their ...
... Poets vsed for that purpose , three kinds of poems reprehensiue , to wit , the Satyre , the Comedie , & the Tragedie : and the first and most bitter inuectiue against vice and vicious men , was the Satyre : which to th'intent their ...
Página 115
... poet , but Shakespeare the greater wit . Shakespeare was the Homer , or father of our dra- matic poets ; Johnson was the Virgil , the pattern of elaborate writing ; I admire him , but I love Shakespeare . To conclude of him ; as he has ...
... poet , but Shakespeare the greater wit . Shakespeare was the Homer , or father of our dra- matic poets ; Johnson was the Virgil , the pattern of elaborate writing ; I admire him , but I love Shakespeare . To conclude of him ; as he has ...
Contenido
An Abridgement of the Notable Work | 5 |
Prologue to Ralph Roister Doister ca 1566 | 11 |
The Art of English Poesy 1589 | 25 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
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