Lectures on Dramatic Literature: Or, The Employment of the Passions in DramaD. Appleton, 1849 - 245 psl. |
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24 psl.
... tears , which I cannot refrain from shedding . Permit me as a suppliant to prostrate at your knees this body des- tined to so sudden a death ; and which my mother brought forth with so much pain . Do not compel me to die before my time ...
... tears , which I cannot refrain from shedding . Permit me as a suppliant to prostrate at your knees this body des- tined to so sudden a death ; and which my mother brought forth with so much pain . Do not compel me to die before my time ...
29 psl.
... tears . Go ! and within its empty walls Cause the Trojan widows to bewail my death . I die in this hope contented and tranquil ! If I have not lived the consort of Achilles , I hope at least that a happy future Will unite my memory with ...
... tears . Go ! and within its empty walls Cause the Trojan widows to bewail my death . I die in this hope contented and tranquil ! If I have not lived the consort of Achilles , I hope at least that a happy future Will unite my memory with ...
40 psl.
... tears its young ; it is no longer a woman or a mother whom we see , but a furious wild beast . Anger is changed into madness , instinct has ta- ken the place of sentiment , the soul has yielded to the body . We turn away , repeating the ...
... tears its young ; it is no longer a woman or a mother whom we see , but a furious wild beast . Anger is changed into madness , instinct has ta- ken the place of sentiment , the soul has yielded to the body . We turn away , repeating the ...
57 psl.
... , Dido , who has been betrayed by Eneas . St. Augustine reproached himself for not being able to read the fourth book of the Æneid , without shedding tears . In fact , the painting of the love of Dido SUICIDE AND THE HATRED OF LIFE . 57.
... , Dido , who has been betrayed by Eneas . St. Augustine reproached himself for not being able to read the fourth book of the Æneid , without shedding tears . In fact , the painting of the love of Dido SUICIDE AND THE HATRED OF LIFE . 57.
65 psl.
... tear its own bowels , should not end by exhausting whatever strength and life may remain ? " What shall we then say to those things ? If God has made man's heart capable of sadness , can it be a crime ? Christian morality does not ...
... tear its own bowels , should not end by exhausting whatever strength and life may remain ? " What shall we then say to those things ? If God has made man's heart capable of sadness , can it be a crime ? Christian morality does not ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Lectures on Dramatic Literature, Or, The Employment of the Passions in Drama ... Marc Girardin, dit Girardin Visos knygos peržiūra - 1849 |
Lectures on Dramatic Literature– Or, The Employment of the Passions in Drama Saint-Marc Girardin Visos knygos peržiūra - 1849 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Acanthe affection ancient Andromache anger Antigone antique Astyanax avenge beautiful become believe Cleanthe Collé comedy Dalainville daugh daughter death despair Desronais Don Diego Donna Lucretia drama Dupuis Edipus eighteenth century emotions endeavored Euphémon Euripides expression eyes fabliau Father Goriot fault fear feel genius Gennaro Geronte Goëthe grandeur Greeks grief Harpagon Hector hero honor human heart husband Idamé idea ingratitude inspires Ismene kill king King Lear Lear less literature live Lucrece Borgia Menedemus Merope Metromania miserable misfortunes modern Moliere Molossus moral mother nature Neoptolemus old Horace Orphan pardon passions paternal authority paternal character paternal love Philoctetes Piron pity poet Polynice Priam Prodigal Prodigal Son Pyrrhus Racine represented respect ridiculous Roman Rousseau scene sentiments Shakspeare society sons Sophocles soul speak stoicism suffering suicide Tchao Tching-Ing tears tenderness Theatre Theseus tragedy Triboulet Ulysses Victor Hugo virtue Voltaire Werter wish word young Zamti
Populiarios ištraukos
141 psl. - And my poor fool is hang'd ! No, no, no life ! Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life, And thou no breath at all?
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52 psl. - For there stood by me this night the angel of God, whose I am, and whom I serve, saying, Fear not, Paul ; thou must be brought before Caesar ; and, lo, God hath given thee all them that sail with thee.
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134 psl. - Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks ! rage ! blow ! You cataracts and hurricanoes, spout Till you have drench'd our steeples, drown'd the cocks ! You sulphurous and thought-executing fires, Vaunt-couriers of oak-cleaving thunderbolts, Singe my white head ! And thou, all-shaking thunder, Strike flat the thick rotundity o...
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