Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United Kingdom, London |
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Seite 46
... story , but by the note of beauty , makes it tolerable . That is to be the function of the Chorus in this play , as if , in contemplating Jason and Medea , we were meant to know that Hell is murky , but ever and anon , in our distress ...
... story , but by the note of beauty , makes it tolerable . That is to be the function of the Chorus in this play , as if , in contemplating Jason and Medea , we were meant to know that Hell is murky , but ever and anon , in our distress ...
Seite 70
... story and the passions proper to that story are most allowed to make themselves felt uncomplicated by the contemporary problems that were harassing Euripides's mind . The scene is Thebes . Heracles is absent on his labours : his wife ...
... story and the passions proper to that story are most allowed to make themselves felt uncomplicated by the contemporary problems that were harassing Euripides's mind . The scene is Thebes . Heracles is absent on his labours : his wife ...
Seite 127
... stories about the subject under discus- sion - two very opportune little stories . Now stories of this sort are not ... story is more encouraging for the Brontë legend . A real countrywoman of my acquaintance , the wife of a farm ...
... stories about the subject under discus- sion - two very opportune little stories . Now stories of this sort are not ... story is more encouraging for the Brontë legend . A real countrywoman of my acquaintance , the wife of a farm ...
Inhalt
Giff Edmonds Memorial Lecture Jam Rude Donatus | 1 |
Wedmore Memorial Lecture Life and Literature | 26 |
The Garden of the Muses A Chorus from the Medea | 43 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
admired Aeschylus Alan Rook artist Athens beauty Branwell Brontë brother C. V. Wedgwood century Charles Charles Lamb Charlotte child Clarendon classical Coleridge contemporary Contributors criticism Dante dead death dream E. H. W. Meyerstein Editor Edmonds emotion English essay Euripides experience expression eyes father Fyson give Greek hand heart Hesiod Homer honour human imaginative inspired John JOSEPH BARD King ladies Lamb Lamb's language Laurence Binyon lecture letters literary literature living Lord lyric man's Medea memory Milton mind Mme Héger Muses nature never obscurity old familiar faces painting Paradise Lost passion picture Plato play poem poet poet's poetic poetry Pre-Raphaelites prose re-creation reader remember Robert Bridges Rossetti sense Shakespeare Sir Frederic Kenyon Sisera sonnet soul spirit things thou thought to-day tragedy truth verse Wisdom words write written wrote young youth