Tragedy and comedy are alike in mode of representation, but differ in subject-matter and treatment. The matters of tragedy are great and terrible, as commands of kings, slaughters, despair, suicides, exiles, bereavements, parricides, incests, conflagrations,... Select Translations from Scaliger's Poetics - 第 53 頁Giulio Cesare Scaligero 著 - 1905 - 96 頁完整檢視 - 關於此書
| Barrett Harper Clark - 1918 - 528 頁
...Tragedy and comedy are alike in mode of representation, but differ in subject-matter and treatment. The matters of tragedy are great and terrible, as...putting out of eyes, weeping, wailing, bewailing, eulogies, and dirges. In comedy we have jests, revelling, weddings with drunken carousals, tricks played... | |
| Barrett Harper Clark - 1918 - 544 頁
...Tragedy and comedy are alike in mode of representation, but differ in subject-matter and treatment. The matters of tragedy are great and terrible, as...conflagrations, battles, the putting out of eyes, weoping, wailing, bewailing, eulogies, and dirges. In comedy we have jests, revelling, weddings with... | |
| Barrett Harper Clark - 1918 - 524 頁
...of representation, but differ in subject-matter and treatment. The matters of tragedy are great andj terrible, as commands of kings, slaughters, despair,...putting out of eyes, weeping, wailing, bewailing, eulogies, and dirges. In comedy we have jests, revelling, weddings with drunken carousals, tricks played... | |
| Barrett Harper Clark - 1918 - 532 頁
...Tragedy and comedy are alike in mode of representation, but differ in subject-matter and treatment. The matters of tragedy are great and terrible, as...putting out of eyes, weeping, wailing, bewailing, eulogies, and dirges. In comedy we have jests, revelling, weddings with drunken carousals, tricks played... | |
| Donald Clive Stuart - 1928 - 704 頁
...things wear a troubled look ; there is a pervading sense of doom, there are exiles and death. . . . The matters of tragedy are great and terrible, as...conflagrations, battles, the putting out of eyes, weeping, bewailing, eulogies and dirges. ... A tragedy is the imitation of the adversity of a distinguished... | |
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