English Tragedy Before Shakespeare1967 |
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Strana 65
... pattern and a monotonous uniformity of style which are not only quite undramatic , but also impress the modern reader , through the inflexible regularity with which the iambic rhythm is used , as being wearisomely pedantic and long ...
... pattern and a monotonous uniformity of style which are not only quite undramatic , but also impress the modern reader , through the inflexible regularity with which the iambic rhythm is used , as being wearisomely pedantic and long ...
Strana 72
... pattern in just the same way as ideas and decisions . Smacking as it does of academic theory , this same speech - style , in which a ' case ' is weighed and debated as it were from the outside even when the speaker's own interests are ...
... pattern in just the same way as ideas and decisions . Smacking as it does of academic theory , this same speech - style , in which a ' case ' is weighed and debated as it were from the outside even when the speaker's own interests are ...
Strana 106
... pattern . By this procedure , which Kyd also follows in other passages , thought and feeling are trimmed and shaped in such a way as to adapt them to the rationalistic see - saw of argument and counter - argument . Balthazar's speech at ...
... pattern . By this procedure , which Kyd also follows in other passages , thought and feeling are trimmed and shaped in such a way as to adapt them to the rationalistic see - saw of argument and counter - argument . Balthazar's speech at ...
Obsah
PART ONE I Introduction page | 11 |
The Set Speech in Renaissance Drama and Con temporary Theory | 21 |
The Basic Types of Dramatic Set Speech | 44 |
Autorská práva | |
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action apostrophe appear beginning characters chronicle plays classical tragedy connexion conventional course death device dialogue diction Doctor Faustus dramatic lament dramatic set speech earlier earth Edward effect Elizabethan drama Elizabethan Tragedy emotional set speech English drama English tragedy episodes Euripides example expression Faustus feeling Ferrex formal lament formulas Gismond give Gorboduc grief haue heaven Hieronimo influence Jew of Malta kind King language later lines Locrine long set speeches long speeches longer lyrical M. C. Bradbrook Marlowe Marlowe's means merely Misfortunes of Arthur monologue moral motifs mourning nature parallel passages passionate pattern Peele playwrights plot poetic Porrex pre-Shakespearian drama prose Queen question Renaissance rhetorical figures rhetorical tragedy scene Schücking Selimus Seneca Shakespeare shows situation soliloquy sorrow Spanish Tragedy speak speaker stage structure style Tamburlaine technique theme thou tion true Tucker Brooke utterance W. W. Greg whole words Zenocrate