Roman DramaThomas Alan Dorey, Donald Reynolds Dudley Basic Books, 1965 - 229 Seiten |
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Seite 83
... whole world for example - Lord , the worms have got into these biscuits . • In Brecht's A Man's a Man , ' Nothing is sacred any more unless it's identity cards . ' The porter Galy Gay has the makings of a miles gloriosus with his ...
... whole world for example - Lord , the worms have got into these biscuits . • In Brecht's A Man's a Man , ' Nothing is sacred any more unless it's identity cards . ' The porter Galy Gay has the makings of a miles gloriosus with his ...
Seite 183
... whole of Corneille's theatre has the same metaphysical background : man faces fate , but in so doing he obeys a higher intelligence which demands a sacrifice the purpose of which he does not understand at first . These lines from Horace ...
... whole of Corneille's theatre has the same metaphysical background : man faces fate , but in so doing he obeys a higher intelligence which demands a sacrifice the purpose of which he does not understand at first . These lines from Horace ...
Seite 202
... whole lines of the Phormio more clearly than those of the later plays . There is something so final and unalterable about its most ordinary statements . The opening lines spoken by Davos , a slave , remain fixed in my mind , perhaps ...
... whole lines of the Phormio more clearly than those of the later plays . There is something so final and unalterable about its most ordinary statements . The opening lines spoken by Davos , a slave , remain fixed in my mind , perhaps ...
Inhalt
Plautus and his Audience | 21 |
The Glorious Military | 51 |
The Amphitryo Theme | 87 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action actors Alcmena Alcmène Alkmene allusion Amphitruo Amphitryon appears Aristophanes atque audience Bessus boast braggart century character chiton Chremes Cleomachus Comedy comic contemporary Corneille Corneille's Créon criticism Curculio Demea Demipho Dircé doth dramatic dramatist Dryden Dyskolos Elizabethan fabula fact father Fraenkel give Gorgias Greek originals Hamlet Heauton Timorumenos Hegio Hercules hero horror humour husband Ibid Jason Jupiter Jupiter's Kleist Knemon Latin Play lines lover mask Medea Médée Menander Menander's Menedemus Mercury mihi miles gloriosus military Molière Molière's Mostellaria nunc Oedipe Palaestrio passages performed perhaps Phormio Plautine Plautus Plautus and Terence Plautus's playwright plot probably prologue Pyrgopolinices quae quam quid references revenge Richard Richard III Roman Rome scene Seneca Seneca's play Shakespeare slave soldier soliloquy Sosia Sosie Sostratos speech stage suggests tells theatre theme Theoropides Thésée thou Thyestes tibi Titus tragedy tragic translation Tyboe Westminster words writing young