Our SenecaArchon Books, 1968 - 285 páginas |
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Página 106
... enters Lycus who fails to see the others until he in turn has pronounced a monologue , whereupon , after one aside by Lycus and one by Megara , quite undramatic and following the comic technique rather than the tragic , there follows an ...
... enters Lycus who fails to see the others until he in turn has pronounced a monologue , whereupon , after one aside by Lycus and one by Megara , quite undramatic and following the comic technique rather than the tragic , there follows an ...
Página 172
... enters with the same agitation . O cruel Fate , o horrid , cruel Fate , What crime so terrible these twice five years Has Mars beheld ? What shall I groan for first ? Once quieted , he too becomes a skilled raconteur , beginning : One ...
... enters with the same agitation . O cruel Fate , o horrid , cruel Fate , What crime so terrible these twice five years Has Mars beheld ? What shall I groan for first ? Once quieted , he too becomes a skilled raconteur , beginning : One ...
Página 177
... enters asking if anyone is at home . Iokaste comes out and , after a short and rapid conversation , the long story follows . Again there is no prepared exit . Very similar is the messenger in the Orestes , although at 852 he is ...
... enters asking if anyone is at home . Iokaste comes out and , after a short and rapid conversation , the long story follows . Again there is no prepared exit . Very similar is the messenger in the Orestes , although at 852 he is ...
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