Our SenecaArchon Books, 1968 - 285 páginas |
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Página 80
... tone is certainly not , throughout the rest of the prologue speech , a light one , but it conveys a sense of terror produced by brute power and anger , in addition to the atmosphere of gloom and horror . The Troades is a play neither of ...
... tone is certainly not , throughout the rest of the prologue speech , a light one , but it conveys a sense of terror produced by brute power and anger , in addition to the atmosphere of gloom and horror . The Troades is a play neither of ...
Página 81
... tone by the usual prologue method . It is a play of intrigue with fatal consequences and , considered as a whole , less of a rhetorical tone picture than the others . The Senecan prologue seems then to come primarily from the Euripidean ...
... tone by the usual prologue method . It is a play of intrigue with fatal consequences and , considered as a whole , less of a rhetorical tone picture than the others . The Senecan prologue seems then to come primarily from the Euripidean ...
Página 148
... tone to either play . With the possible exception of the Troades , the choruses are no longer closely enough wrought into the fabric of the plays to dominate the tone , even if their own religious tone were in itself convincing . The ...
... tone to either play . With the possible exception of the Troades , the choruses are no longer closely enough wrought into the fabric of the plays to dominate the tone , even if their own religious tone were in itself convincing . The ...
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 Aegisthus Aeschylus Agamemnon Ajax Amphitryon anapests ANTISTROPHE appears Athens audience Bacchus Calchas character choral ode chorus Clytemnestra comes curse death Deianeira dialogue didst divine dost drama dread earth Elektra entrance epic Eteocles Euripides exit fact familiar Fate father fear follows Fortune function fury ghost give gods Greek hand hast heaven Hecuba Hercules Furens Hercules on Oeta Herdsman Hippolytus Horace horror imperium Iokaste King Kreon Laius lines logue long speech lord Medea Megara messenger speeches messenger's speech monologue motivation murder narrative natural naught never nurse Oedipus Oeta opening oracle Orestes pestilence Phaedra philosophic Phoebus play plot poet Polybus prayer present prologue Prometheus recitation rhetorical Roman Rome Satire scene senate Seneca Senex Sophocles soul speak speaker stage Stoic Stoicism story suppliant technique tell Thebes thee Theseus thine Thyestes tion Tiresias tone tragedy Troades Twas tyrant unto wholly words