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Page xi
... Rules , 27. Common Effects of Verses , 28. Effects resulting from Quantity , 29. Effects resulting from Quality , 30. Effects resulting from Order or Arrangement , 31. Faults in Quantity , 32. Faults in Quality , 33. Common Laws , 34 ...
... Rules , 27. Common Effects of Verses , 28. Effects resulting from Quantity , 29. Effects resulting from Quality , 30. Effects resulting from Order or Arrangement , 31. Faults in Quantity , 32. Faults in Quality , 33. Common Laws , 34 ...
Page 1
... rules governing construction , dimensions , as it were , being given to a rude and formless body . Thus arose the established laws of speech . Later , language was adorned and embellished as with raiments , and then it appeared ...
... rules governing construction , dimensions , as it were , being given to a rude and formless body . Thus arose the established laws of speech . Later , language was adorned and embellished as with raiments , and then it appeared ...
Page 21
... rule , and because this poetry was vulgar , lawless , and rude , and , in distinction . from the later style , purely a product of nature and not at all of art , it had no name . In the other , the emulous senti- ments were clothed in ...
... rule , and because this poetry was vulgar , lawless , and rude , and , in distinction . from the later style , purely a product of nature and not at all of art , it had no name . In the other , the emulous senti- ments were clothed in ...
Page 26
... good fortune be yours , and yours good health . This we bear from the goddess , and she , her illustrious self , invoked it . ' From this we 26 Scaliger Consideration of Certain Rules, Insight and Foresight-Prudentia, Figure, Figures,
... good fortune be yours , and yours good health . This we bear from the goddess , and she , her illustrious self , invoked it . ' From this we 26 Scaliger Consideration of Certain Rules, Insight and Foresight-Prudentia, Figure, Figures,
Page 42
... rule for the division into parts and the introduction of actors , nor did he limit the actors to an exact number . It is said that Cratinus was the first to distinguish the parts , to divide the play into acts , and to limit the ...
... rule for the division into parts and the introduction of actors , nor did he limit the actors to an exact number . It is said that Cratinus was the first to distinguish the parts , to divide the play into acts , and to limit the ...
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Common terms and phrases
action actors Aeneas Aeschylus Aristophanes Aristotle Book Borcos censure characters chorus Cratinus derived Diana divine drama Eclogues employs epic Epicharmus Euripides expression fact father Forsooth goats goddess gods grammarians Greeks call hand hearer Hecuba Hercules Hesiod Homer Horace Iliad imitation invention jests judgment kind of comedy KINDS OF POETRY king language later Latin Lityerses Livius Andronicus Lucan means metre Middle Comedy mimes mode Mopsus Musaeus Muses nature Odyssey Old Comedy orator Orestes origin parabasis passage pastoral Ph.D philosophers Plato Plautus plays pleasure plot poem poema poesis poet poetic proper place Quintilian recognized refined Romans satire satyric satyric plays Scaliger sentiment shepherds ship Sicilians song Sophocles speaking species speech spirit story style subject-matter sung Telesilla Terence Theocritus Theopompus Thespis things tion tradition tragedy tragic Trojan verb verses villages Virgil wine women word writing ἐκ καὶ
Popular passages
Page 89 - A New Study of his Life and Writings. CAROLINE LOUISA WHITE, Ph.D. $1.50. III. The Life of St. Cecilia, from MS. Ashmole 43 and MS. Cotton Tiberius E. VII, with Introduction, Variants, and Glossary. BERTHA ELLEN LOVEWELL, Ph.D. $1.00. IV. Dryden's Dramatic Theory and Practice.
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Page 69 - I supplicate thee, O queen, whether thou art a goddess or a mortal ! If indeed thou art a goddess of them that keep the wide heaven ; to Artemis, then, the daughter of great Zeus, I mainly liken thee, for beauty and stature and shapeliness. But if thou art one of the daughters of men- who dwell on earth, thrice blessed are thy father and thy lady mother, and thrice blessed thy brethren. Surely their souls ever glow with gladness for thy sake, each time they see thee entering the dance, so fair a...
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Page 73 - ... said that I should fill up the measure of sorrow on the deep, or ever I came to mine own country; and lo, all these things have an end. In such wise doth Zeus crown the wide heaven with clouds, and hath troubled the deep, and the blasts rush on of all the winds ; yea, now is utter doom assured me. Thrice blessed those Danaans, yea, four times blessed, who perished on a time in wide Troy-land, doing a pleasure to the sons of Atreus! Would to God that I too had died, and met my fate on that day...
Page 36 - I do not wish to attack this definition other than by adding my own : A tragedy is the imitation of the adversity of a distinguished man ; it employs the form of action, presents a disastrous denouement, and is expressed in impressive metrical language.
Page 53 - Tragedy and comedy are alike in mode of representation, but differ in subject-matter and treatment. The matters of tragedy are great and terrible, as commands of kings, slaughters, despair, suicides, exiles, bereavements, parricides, incests, conflagrations, battles, the putting out of eyes, weeping, wailing, bewailing, eulogies, and dirges.
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Page 76 - I am ODYSSEUS, SON OF LAERTES, who am in men's minds for all manner of wiles, and my fame reaches unto heaven. And I dwell in clear-seen Ithaca, wherein is a mountain Neriton, with trembling forest leaves, standing manifest to view, and many islands lie around, very near one to the other, Dulichium and Same, and wooded Zacynthus.