Ramus, Volumes 1-2Aureal Publications, 1972 - Classical literature |
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Page 29
... lyric . Would an audience worry about the coherence of what is done in such radically different ways ? When a character moves from one medium to another he is not only changing his manner of speech . The stage has become a different ...
... lyric . Would an audience worry about the coherence of what is done in such radically different ways ? When a character moves from one medium to another he is not only changing his manner of speech . The stage has become a different ...
Page 31
... lyric is there any attempt to represent the event . It is intensely stylised , but then so is the stichomythia ( what could be more stylised than stichomythia ? ) and the question is not whether it looks as if someone really is dying in ...
... lyric is there any attempt to represent the event . It is intensely stylised , but then so is the stichomythia ( what could be more stylised than stichomythia ? ) and the question is not whether it looks as if someone really is dying in ...
Page 34
... lyric was for the chorus , rhetoric for the actor , but now Cassandra is caught up into the dance . In her person the two lines of the play converge . The dance of age old wrong invades the action . From here on lyric and rhetoric are ...
... lyric was for the chorus , rhetoric for the actor , but now Cassandra is caught up into the dance . In her person the two lines of the play converge . The dance of age old wrong invades the action . From here on lyric and rhetoric are ...
Contents
EDITORIAL page v | 1 |
TALKING ABOUT GREEK TRAGEDY | 26 |
IN DEFENCE OF PERSIUS | 48 |
Copyright | |
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achievement Achilles action Aegon Aeneas Aeneid amatory odes Anchises Antigone Apollo Ascanius audience Battus behaviour Book Calpurnius Catullus character Chorus civilization context contrast Corydon Creon criticism curse death Deiphobus Dido Dido's divine dramatic Eclogue emotional empire epithets Euripides expression fact fama Faunus fire furor Georgics glory gods golden bough Greek Hecabe Helen Heracles hero heroic Hippolytus Homer Horace Horace's human hunting ideology Idyll imagery immemor important interpretation irony language lines literary literature Lucretius lyric meaning Medea Meliboeus metaphor Misenus moral motif nature Nero Nero's oath Palinurus Pallas passage passion pastoral Persius Phaedra phrase pietas play poem poet poet's poetic poetry Polyneices Pöschl quae reader Roman Rome Rome's rustic satire scene seems Segal sense serpent simile song Sophocles stanza suggests symbolic Tacitus theatre thematic theme Theocritus Theseus things traditional tragedy tragic Trojan Troy Turnus Venus Virgil words καὶ