Our SenecaArchon Books, 1968 - 285 páginas |
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Página 58
... audience , for his own training . The Elder Seneca who died during the reign of Tiberius was old enough to have ... audience and to the judge . The former he compares to “ toiling in one's dreams . ” He still has in mind that at that ...
... audience , for his own training . The Elder Seneca who died during the reign of Tiberius was old enough to have ... audience and to the judge . The former he compares to “ toiling in one's dreams . ” He still has in mind that at that ...
Página 59
... audience to listen to his oratorical recitations . Certainly by the time of Nero the recitation before an invited audience was the accepted method of publication . All literature was produced with the audience in mind , a restricted ...
... audience to listen to his oratorical recitations . Certainly by the time of Nero the recitation before an invited audience was the accepted method of publication . All literature was produced with the audience in mind , a restricted ...
Página 60
... audience was calculated . It is worth while to stop long enough to realize what was the educational background of the average audience to which , if he was to gain any fame , a poet must address himself and whose tastes he must satisfy ...
... audience was calculated . It is worth while to stop long enough to realize what was the educational background of the average audience to which , if he was to gain any fame , a poet must address himself and whose tastes he must satisfy ...
Índice
PREFACE vii | 3 |
THE BACKGROUND OF SENECAN TRAGEDY | 22 |
THE PROLOGUE | 64 |
Direitos de autor | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
action addresses Aeschylus Agamemnon already appears asks audience become begins bring called character choral chorus clear close comes course dead death dialogue dost drama dread earth element enters entrance epigram Eteocles Euripides fact familiar Fate fear finally follows Fortune function ghost give gods Greek hand Hercules horror important individual interest Iokaste King Kreon Laius land largely later least leave less lines lord means Medea messenger monologue motivation murder narrative natural never noted nurse Oedipus once opening perhaps Plautus play plot present produced prologue question reason recitation rhetorical Roman Rome scene seems senate Seneca serve setting simply Sophocles soul speak speaker speech stage story sure tell Thebes thee thing thou tion Tiresias tone tragedy true whole wholly