SophoclesG. Allen, 1902 - 215 páginas |
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Página vi
... distinction between verse and prose ; we may bless him for easing poetical diction , but most of his blank verse might conveniently be printed as prose . The rhymed couplet gives a perpetual reser- vation within which vi PREFACE.
... distinction between verse and prose ; we may bless him for easing poetical diction , but most of his blank verse might conveniently be printed as prose . The rhymed couplet gives a perpetual reser- vation within which vi PREFACE.
Página vii
Sophocles John Swinnerton Phillimore. The rhymed couplet gives a perpetual reser- vation within which to approximate , as near as may be , to prose . With Chaucer , Dryden , Pope , Keats , Shelley , and the Victorians before us , what ...
Sophocles John Swinnerton Phillimore. The rhymed couplet gives a perpetual reser- vation within which to approximate , as near as may be , to prose . With Chaucer , Dryden , Pope , Keats , Shelley , and the Victorians before us , what ...
Página xx
... give the artistic embodiment of a civilisation , he is the Classic of that time . Those who love him , love the Civilisation which he mirrors ; if we are coldly affected towards him , it is because we have not realised his message . If ...
... give the artistic embodiment of a civilisation , he is the Classic of that time . Those who love him , love the Civilisation which he mirrors ; if we are coldly affected towards him , it is because we have not realised his message . If ...
Página xxviii
... gives us the spirit of the Peri- clean world , with something of the analytic judgment of one who sees his ideal all the more clearly by comparison with the new times into which he has outlived . Tennyson to the day of his death is ...
... gives us the spirit of the Peri- clean world , with something of the analytic judgment of one who sees his ideal all the more clearly by comparison with the new times into which he has outlived . Tennyson to the day of his death is ...
Página xxxvii
... gives perhaps the first im- pulse to a study of plot , the first interest in the riddle , " How will a given situation of " What must eventually come persons end ? " out concerning x to account for this and that behaviour , this and ...
... gives perhaps the first im- pulse to a study of plot , the first interest in the riddle , " How will a given situation of " What must eventually come persons end ? " out concerning x to account for this and that behaviour , this and ...
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Términos y frases comunes
1st Counter-turn 1st Turn 2nd Counter-turn 2nd Turn 4th century B.C. 5th century Aegeus Aeschylus Ajax Antigone Apollo Athens Attic blind brother child CHORUS Colonos Creon curse daughter dead dear death diction Dionysus dipus divine doom dread Edipus Edipus Coloneus Edipus Rex Enter Eteocles Euripides Exit eyes fate father fear gain God's Gods Greek grim Haemon hand hear heart honour ISMENE Jocasta kill King Laïos land living look Lord maids march measure Menoeceus mind mother murder ne'er Neoptolemus never pain Periclean Periclean Age Phoebus phrase play Plutarch poet Polybus Polyneices pray Prince prove shame Shep sire Sophocles speak style suppliant sweet tale Teiresias tell Theban Thebes thee Theseus thing thou thought Tragedy twas What's word wretch Zeus ἂν γὰρ τὸ