Patterns and Perspectives in English Renaissance DramaUniversity of Delaware Press, 1988 - 309 páginas These essays bring attention to the designs that the English Renaissance playwrights imposed on their work. Among the patterns explored are those inspired by the literature, drama, or poetics of classical times and visual patterns derived from traditions of stage presentation. |
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Página 24
... father seeking to disinherit his son . Some of the cases had a historical foundation , but more of them were purely fictitious , not to say fantastic , and were therefore especially appeal- ing to the student . The wholesome pill of ...
... father seeking to disinherit his son . Some of the cases had a historical foundation , but more of them were purely fictitious , not to say fantastic , and were therefore especially appeal- ing to the student . The wholesome pill of ...
Página 32
... father of a murdered son . This scene seems to have been designed as a substitute for the following one in which Hieronymo talks with the Senex , also the father of a murdered son . In fact , Hieronymo's words to the Old Man : " I in ...
... father of a murdered son . This scene seems to have been designed as a substitute for the following one in which Hieronymo talks with the Senex , also the father of a murdered son . In fact , Hieronymo's words to the Old Man : " I in ...
Página 33
... father's body be given proper burial in spite of the vindictive demand of his father's creditors that the body be left to rot above ground . When Novall , Sr. , the " premier president " of the court Controversia in the English Drama ...
... father's body be given proper burial in spite of the vindictive demand of his father's creditors that the body be left to rot above ground . When Novall , Sr. , the " premier president " of the court Controversia in the English Drama ...
Página 34
... father's place in prison , provided that the body may then be buried . The offer is accepted , and the old marshal is accorded a solemn funeral . This much of the plot might have come from any of several versions of the story of the ...
... father's place in prison , provided that the body may then be buried . The offer is accepted , and the old marshal is accorded a solemn funeral . This much of the plot might have come from any of several versions of the story of the ...
Página 35
... father , who become key figures in the plot and make possible a different legal action than the suit for ingratitude . Although , as a result , the relations of Charalois and Rochfort in the end are unlike those of Cimon and Callias ...
... father , who become key figures in the plot and make possible a different legal action than the suit for ingratitude . Although , as a result , the relations of Charalois and Rochfort in the end are unlike those of Cimon and Callias ...
Conteúdo
23 | |
41 | |
English Style French Style | 55 |
Reflections on the Authors Agents in Comedy | 65 |
The Appeal of the Comic Deceiver | 78 |
Aristophanes Plautus Terence and the Refinement of English Comedy | 89 |
The English Masque and the Functions of Comedy | 107 |
Patterns Derived from Traditions of Staging | 125 |
Things as They Are and the World of Absolutes in Jonsons Plays and Masques | 179 |
John Ford and the Final Exaltation of Love | 196 |
Patterns Suited to Perspectives | 207 |
Marlowe and the Jades of Asia | 209 |
The Shadow of Action | 225 |
The Dramatic Structure of The Broken Heart | 240 |
King John and the Drama of History | 252 |
Mad Lovers Vainglorious Soldiers | 281 |
The Wounds of Civil War in Plays by Shakespeare and His Predecessors | 127 |
The Ceremonies of Titus Andronicus | 138 |
Shakespeare and the Ceremonies of Romance | 148 |
Spectacles of State | 167 |
Shakespeare and Fletcher on Love and Friendship | 289 |
Index | 304 |
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Termos e frases comuns
action actor admiration antimasque appears Aristophanes audience Barabas Bartholomew Fair Bassanes Ben Jonson Caesar called Cambridge ceremony characters Charalois classical comic Constance controversia court critics dance death deceivers declamation dramatic Dryden edition Edward Edward II effect Elizabethan Emilia emotional English essay Fatal Dowry feelings final Fletcher friendship Gaveston gives Henry hero heroic humor ideal imitation Inigo Jones Ithocles John Ford Jonson Jonsonian King John knight Knight's Tale ladies laughter Lavinia London lover Mad Lover Marlowe Marlowe's masque masquers means Memnon moral Mortimer Noble Kinsmen onstage Orgilus Ovid pattern Peniboy Penthea performed Plautus play playwright plot poetry political present Queen Renaissance reprinted revenge rhetorical romance satire says scene seems Shakespeare sort spectacle spectators speech stage direction Stephen Orgel story style suggest Tamburlaine Tamora Terence theatre theme Theseus tion Titus Andronicus Titus's tradition tragedy tragicomedy transformation translation triumph University Press words
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Página 102 - ... not void of these talents, have made so wretched a use of them, that, had the consecration of their labours been committed to the hands of the hangman, no good man would have regretted their loss; nor am I afraid to mention Rabelais, and Aristophanes himself, in this number. For, if I may speak my opinion freely of these two last writers, and of their works, their design appears to me very plainly to have been to ridicule all sobriety, modesty, decency, virtue, and religion, out of the world.
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Página 231 - And with the world be still at enmity. What need the arctic people love starlight, To whom the sun shines both by day and night? Farewell base stooping to the lordly peers! My knee shall bow to none but to the king. As for the multitude, that are...
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Página 97 - Tis not the' poet, but the age is prais'd. Wit's now arriv'd to a more high degree; Our native language more refin'd and free. Our ladies and our men now speak more wit In conversation, than those poets writ.