Dramatic Theory and the Rhymed Heroic Play, المجلد 10Oxford University Press, 1931 - 235 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 30
الصفحة 147
... bombast was due to an altered notion of what constituted epic grandeur . In the Romances ( which , as we have seen , were considered to be prose epics ) exalted standards of honour prevailed , and the chief characters ... BOMBAST 147 Bombast.
... bombast was due to an altered notion of what constituted epic grandeur . In the Romances ( which , as we have seen , were considered to be prose epics ) exalted standards of honour prevailed , and the chief characters ... BOMBAST 147 Bombast.
الصفحة 157
... bombast is commonly the delight of that audience which loves poetry but understands it not ' , and contends that ' the roar of passion , indeed , may please an audience ... bombast . excess ' . He was not unmindful of his own BOMBAST 157.
... bombast is commonly the delight of that audience which loves poetry but understands it not ' , and contends that ' the roar of passion , indeed , may please an audience ... bombast . excess ' . He was not unmindful of his own BOMBAST 157.
الصفحة 233
... bombast in his plays , 159 ; period of his best work , 182 ; Sophonisba , or Han- nibal's Overthrow , analysis of , 213-18 ; influenced by Webster and Ford , 214 ; his skill in con- triving situations , 215 ; loose unity of place ...
... bombast in his plays , 159 ; period of his best work , 182 ; Sophonisba , or Han- nibal's Overthrow , analysis of , 213-18 ; influenced by Webster and Ford , 214 ; his skill in con- triving situations , 215 ; loose unity of place ...
المحتوى
Chapter One INTRODUCTION | 1 |
Influence of Theatrical Conditions on the Drama | 58 |
Chapter | 65 |
9 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
action actors Ancients appear argument attempt audience become blank verse bombast changes characters chiefly comedy comic concerned considered contemporary continued Corneille Corneille's criticism D'Avenant death discussion drama Dramatic Poesy dramatists Dryden effect element Elizabethan England English Essay of Dramatic example fact favour France French frequently greater hand heroic play honour important incidents Indian influence instance interest kind King Ladies latter less lovers maintains means mind nature observed original passage passion performance period persons playwrights plot poem poet points practice preface present principle probably production Queen reason regards remarks represented Restoration Rhodes rhyme Rival romances rule says scenes seen serious setting shows Siege stage success suggests term theatre theory tion tragedy tragic tragicomedy true unity unity of place whole writing written