Aristotle: PoeticsUniversity of Michigan Press, 1967 - 124 páginas |
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Página 11
... later antiquity , now rose to such despotic power that great poets - for example , Corneille - lived in awe and dread of its supposedly infallible " rules . " The total sequence of events , including this final peripety eis eutychian ...
... later antiquity , now rose to such despotic power that great poets - for example , Corneille - lived in awe and dread of its supposedly infallible " rules . " The total sequence of events , including this final peripety eis eutychian ...
Página 73
... later ones ( Myn- niscus used to call Callippides " ape , ” on the ground that he exaggerated too much , and 3562a1 there was a similar opinion about | Pindarus too ) . So tragedy as a whole stands in the same relation to epic as these ...
... later ones ( Myn- niscus used to call Callippides " ape , ” on the ground that he exaggerated too much , and 3562a1 there was a similar opinion about | Pindarus too ) . So tragedy as a whole stands in the same relation to epic as these ...
Página 104
... later addition ) : complex plot , sec . 13 ; pathos , sec . 14 ; characters , sec . 15 ; episodes , sec . 17. — The inexactness of the reference is perhaps miti- gated if this paragraph also is a later addition by Aristotle ( see note ...
... later addition ) : complex plot , sec . 13 ; pathos , sec . 14 ; characters , sec . 15 ; episodes , sec . 17. — The inexactness of the reference is perhaps miti- gated if this paragraph also is a later addition by Aristotle ( see note ...
Términos y frases comunes
according action actors actually Aeschylus appears appropriate argument Aristotle Aristotle's beginning better called century character clause clear comedy complex composed composition course criticism dialogues discussion effect elements emotional epic episodes Euripides example expression fact foreign Further give Greek hand happens Hence Homer human iambic idea Iliad imitation important interpretation kind language later length less lines mean mentioned metaphor MICHIGAN moral nature noun Odyssey Oedipus omitted original particular passage pathos perhaps peripety persons phrase pity and fear Plato play pleasure plot poems Poetics poetry poets possible present probably produce question reason recognition reference respect seems sense sentence short simple single sound species speech stage stands story structure taken term theory things thought tion tragedy tragic translation trochaic turn utterance verbal verse whole