Lectures on the English Comic WritersJ.M. Dent & Sons, Limited, 1930 - Počet stran: 340 |
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Strana 36
... comedy exists only in towns , and crowds of borrowed characters , who copy others as the satirist copies them , and who are only seen to be despised . All beyond Hyde Park is a desart to it : ' while there the pastoral and poetic comedy ...
... comedy exists only in towns , and crowds of borrowed characters , who copy others as the satirist copies them , and who are only seen to be despised . All beyond Hyde Park is a desart to it : ' while there the pastoral and poetic comedy ...
Strana 37
... comedy which relates to gallantry and intrigue , the difference between Shakspeare's comic heroines and those of a later period may be referred to the same distinction between natural and artificial life , between the world of fancy and ...
... comedy which relates to gallantry and intrigue , the difference between Shakspeare's comic heroines and those of a later period may be referred to the same distinction between natural and artificial life , between the world of fancy and ...
Strana 155
... comedy at all - but the sentimental . Such is our modern comedy . There is a period in the progress of manners anterior to both these , in which the foibles and follies of individuals are of nature's planting , not the growth of art or ...
... comedy at all - but the sentimental . Such is our modern comedy . There is a period in the progress of manners anterior to both these , in which the foibles and follies of individuals are of nature's planting , not the growth of art or ...
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absurdity admiration affectation amusing appearance beauty Beggar's Opera Ben Jonson better Brentford Caleb Williams character circumstances comedy comic common delight Don Quixote English Epicene equally extravagance face Falstaff fancy favourite feeling folly genius gentleman Gil Blas give grace hand heart hero Hogarth Hudibras human humour idea imagination impression insipid instance interest Jem Belcher lady laugh live look Lord Lord Byron lover ludicrous main-chance manners means Millamant mind mistress moral nature never object opinion ourselves pain passion perhaps person philosopher picture play pleasure poet poetry present pretensions principle Rake's Progress reason refinement ridiculous romance satire scene School for Scandal seems self-love sense sentiment Shakspeare shew sort spirit stage story style supposed sympathy Tartuffe taste Tatler thing thought Tom Jones truth turn vanity whole WILLIAM HAZLITT words writers