Dryden's Heroic PlaysMacmillan, 1981 - Počet stran: 195 |
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Strana
... moral habit , “ since he creates in Nestor the image of perfect virtue " ( pp . 98-9 ) . But Nestor , perfect in moral habit , is not perfect in age , and Tasso now blends Aristotle and Horace in the proposition that a poet should ...
... moral habit , “ since he creates in Nestor the image of perfect virtue " ( pp . 98-9 ) . But Nestor , perfect in moral habit , is not perfect in age , and Tasso now blends Aristotle and Horace in the proposition that a poet should ...
Strana
... moral line , returning instead to Achilles ' and Rinaldo's clearly reprehensible treatment of their kings : " He threatens them , and speaks insolently of soverign [ sic ] power ; but so do Achilles and Rinaldo , who were subjects and ...
... moral line , returning instead to Achilles ' and Rinaldo's clearly reprehensible treatment of their kings : " He threatens them , and speaks insolently of soverign [ sic ] power ; but so do Achilles and Rinaldo , who were subjects and ...
Strana 142
... moral realities are seen as baseless and tenuous mirages , vanishing before the triumphant actuality of the will . Seeing the triumph of will over morality as the triumph of reality over illusion , Morat arrives at the corollary that a ...
... moral realities are seen as baseless and tenuous mirages , vanishing before the triumphant actuality of the will . Seeing the triumph of will over morality as the triumph of reality over illusion , Morat arrives at the corollary that a ...
Obsah
Preface | |
The Indian Queen 22 | |
The Indian Emperour | 38 |
Autorská práva | |
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Abdalla Acacis Achilles action Almahide Almahide's Almanzor appear asserts Assyria attempt Aureng-Zebe becomes beginning believe Berenice Boabdelin brings career Catharine Catharine's cause characters Christian claims concern Conquest continues contrast Cortez course creates criticism Cyrus death desire destroy divine dream Dryden echoes Emperor evidence example face fact fails falls fear final flaws follow force further give Granada Heav'n hero heroic plays honour human ideal identity illusion imagery immediately Indamora Indian interest King later less live London lover Lyndaraxa magnanimity Maximin merely mind mistress Montezuma moral Morat move nature never Nevertheless offers once Orazia parallel passion perfect Platonic Porphyrius portraying prisoners provides Queen reality reason refuses reveals rival role romance scene seek seems sense sexual similarly soon Soul speech spirit sustained tragedy triumph true turn villains virtue whereas