Plato to Alexander Pope: Backgrounds of Modern CriticismWalter Sutton, Vivian Sutton Odyssey Press, 1966 - 243 páginas |
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Página 85
... Greek rhetori- cian in Rome during the first century A.D. The English title , first used in 1739 , is misleading because the treatise is not concerned with " sublimity " in the most common eighteenth century sense of the term . Rather ...
... Greek rhetori- cian in Rome during the first century A.D. The English title , first used in 1739 , is misleading because the treatise is not concerned with " sublimity " in the most common eighteenth century sense of the term . Rather ...
Página 117
... Greek komoidia , from komos , revel or village fes- tival ( from kome , village ) + oidia , song ( Webster's Third New Interna- tional Dictionary ) . 3 Tragedy , from the Greek tragos , he goat + oidia , song ( ibid . ) . One possible ...
... Greek komoidia , from komos , revel or village fes- tival ( from kome , village ) + oidia , song ( Webster's Third New Interna- tional Dictionary ) . 3 Tragedy , from the Greek tragos , he goat + oidia , song ( ibid . ) . One possible ...
Página 213
... Greek and Latin . No man is tied in modern poesy to observe any farther rule in the feet of his verse but that they be dissyllables ; whether spondee , trochee , or iambic , it matters not ; only he is obliged to rhyme . Neither do the ...
... Greek and Latin . No man is tied in modern poesy to observe any farther rule in the feet of his verse but that they be dissyllables ; whether spondee , trochee , or iambic , it matters not ; only he is obliged to rhyme . Neither do the ...
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Plato to Alexander Pope: Backgrounds of Modern Criticism Walter Sutton,Vivian Sutton Vista de fragmentos - 1966 |
Términos y frases comunes
action admiration Aeschylus Ancients Aristotle audience beauty Ben Jonson better blank verse called character comedy Crites critics delight Demosthenes diction divine doth dramatic Dryden English epic poetry Eugenius Euripides excellent expression eyes father fault French genius give Glaucon Greek hath Hesiod Homer honor Horace humor iambic Iliad imagine imitation inspiration John Dryden Jonson judge judgment kind knowledge language laughter learning Lisideius living Longinus matter mean metaphors meter mind modern Muse nature Neander neoclassical never observed Odyssey passions perfect persons philosopher pity Plato Plautus play plot poem poesy poet poet's poetic Polygnotus praise proper prose Quintilian reason rhapsode rhyme rules scene sense Silent Woman Socrates song Sophocles soul sound speak speech stage style sublimity things thought tion tragedy tragic tragicomedies true truth unity virtue whole words writ write Xenophon