The Growth and Structure of Elizabethan ComedyChatto & Windus, 1955 - 245 páginas |
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Página 32
... language to delight and compel the hearer's assent . Originally a school disci- pline , it became in this period something new - the study not of classical forms but of the rapidly shifting forms of the English language itself . Though ...
... language to delight and compel the hearer's assent . Originally a school disci- pline , it became in this period something new - the study not of classical forms but of the rapidly shifting forms of the English language itself . Though ...
Página 34
... language led to a general taste for gorgeousness . The late Elizabethan rhetoricians such as Peacham , France , Putten- ham and Day were ready to set out plans , after the poets had begun to practise : Sidney and Spenser were acclaimed ...
... language led to a general taste for gorgeousness . The late Elizabethan rhetoricians such as Peacham , France , Putten- ham and Day were ready to set out plans , after the poets had begun to practise : Sidney and Spenser were acclaimed ...
Página 50
... language of the earlier Sapho and Phao and Endimion ; but in his latest plays , Lyly moved nearer to the diction of common life.12 In tragedy , Marlowe had imposed a like consistency . The language of drama seems to have remained always ...
... language of the earlier Sapho and Phao and Endimion ; but in his latest plays , Lyly moved nearer to the diction of common life.12 In tragedy , Marlowe had imposed a like consistency . The language of drama seems to have remained always ...
Índice
The Traffique of the Stage I I | 11 |
The Lan | 27 |
The Decorum of the Scene | 42 |
Direitos de autor | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
acting actors Admiral's Men antemasque appear audience Bartholomew Fair Ben Jonson boys brother Chapman Chapter characters Chaucer's cheating clown comic contrast court courtly critical Cupid Cynthia's Revels decorum Dekker devil disguise Duke Elizabeth Elizabethan English Envy Fair figure final Fletcher fool Greene's Gulls Hamlet hath hero heroines Heywood Histriomastix Honest Whore Humour Induction Isle of Gulls Italian Jonson Jonsonian judgement kind King knight Lady language learned Leontes literary London Lord Love's Love's Labour's Lost lovers Lyly Lyly's Madeleine Doran Maid Marston masque medieval Merry Middleton mistress moral play Mucedorus Orlando Parnassus plays parody Patient Grissel Pericles players plot poet poetry popular comedy prentices Prince prodigal Prologue Puritan Queen Revels rhetoric role satiric comedy scene Shakespeare spectators speech stage story style Tale theatre theme thou tion tradition tragedy tragi-comedy trick triumph virtue Volpone wife wives woman wooing writer