Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Band 25 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 4
Seite 53
... Aeschylus , knew most of his plays by heart , and thought the ' Oresteia " on the whole the greatest spiritual work of man . " His admira- tion for Sophocles was hardly less great , and though all through his life he despised Euripides ...
... Aeschylus , knew most of his plays by heart , and thought the ' Oresteia " on the whole the greatest spiritual work of man . " His admira- tion for Sophocles was hardly less great , and though all through his life he despised Euripides ...
Seite 54
... Aeschylus ' ' Choephori , ' the speech of Phoenix in Book IX of the ' Iliad , ' and , more surprisingly , since he hardly ever spoke in praise of Ovid , some 300 lines in Book VIII of the Metamorphoses . " To Aeschylus Swinburne may ...
... Aeschylus ' ' Choephori , ' the speech of Phoenix in Book IX of the ' Iliad , ' and , more surprisingly , since he hardly ever spoke in praise of Ovid , some 300 lines in Book VIII of the Metamorphoses . " To Aeschylus Swinburne may ...
Seite 58
... Aeschylus or Sophocles . The gods may act as they do , but that places no obligation on the poet to make less attractive those characters who fight against the divine will . Just as Aeschylus throws all his imaginative power into the ...
... Aeschylus or Sophocles . The gods may act as they do , but that places no obligation on the poet to make less attractive those characters who fight against the divine will . Just as Aeschylus throws all his imaginative power into the ...
Inhalt
Fact and Fancy in Medieval English Literature By Miss | 12 |
Thomas | 28 |
Atalanta in Calydon By C M Bowra M A F B A | 51 |
5 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Aeschylus Althaea appear artist Atalanta baroque beginning Bristol brothers Callimachus Catcott century characters Charleston Chatterton Chekhov death delight Dickens EDWARD MARSH emotion English Euripides eyes fancy father feel fiction give Greek heart Heaven hell Hoyland human idea imagination instinct interest John Baker kind L. A. G. Strong ladies Lecture letter literary literature live Lloyd look Lord Lord Steyne Magazine means medieval Meleager Middle Ages mind miracles Miss Rumsey moral mother narrative nature never novel novelists observation Ovid passion perhaps persons poem poet poetry readers remember romantic Rudyard Kipling Scott sense short story Society Sophocles soul spirit strange Street style Swinburne Swinburne's tell Thackeray Thackeray's theme things Thomas THOMAS CHATTERTON thought Tournament tragedy tragic truth Turgenev Vanity Fair vision Vladimir Petrovitch woman words write written wrote young youth Zinaïda