John DrydenEarl Roy Miner Bell, 1972 - 363 páginas On reading Dryden - Dryden's comedies - Dryden and the tradition of serious drama - An aspect of the Baroque in Dryden's art and criticism - Dryden's panegyrics and lyrics - "Absalom and Achitophel" and Dryden's political cosmos - Dryden and satire - Forms and motives of narrative poetry - Dryden and the classics - Dryden and seventeenth-century prose style. |
Contenido
On Reading Dryden | 1 |
Drydens Comedies | 39 |
Dryden and the Tradition of Serious Drama | 58 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Absalom and Achitophel achievement allusions appear authority beginning called century characters Charles Christian classical close comedy comic concerned couplet critics death developed divine drama Dryden earlier effect England English epic essay example expressed Fables figure final gives grotesque hero heroic human idea ideal important includes James John John Dryden kind King language later less lines literary Literature Lives London Love Mac Flecknoe Milton mind myth narrative nature once opening original passage perhaps Persius Plautus play plot poem poet poetic poetry political Pope praise Preface present prose reader reason Restoration rhetorical romance satire says scene seems sense seventeenth-century Shadwell Studies style suggests things thought tion translation true turn verse Virgil Watson writing written wrote
Referencias a este libro
The Sentence-structure in John Dryden's An Essay of Dramatic Poesy Keitarō Irie Vista de fragmentos - 1985 |