| John George Robertson, Charles Jasper Sisson - 1918 - 550 pàgines
...be remembered, had noticed that the incidents arousing pity and fear ' have the greatest effect upon the mind when they occur unexpectedly and at the same time in consequence of one another2. The Italian Jesuit Alexander Donatus, whose Ars Poética was popular in Germany in the seventeenth... | |
| John George Robertson, Charles Jasper Sisson - 1918 - 548 pàgines
...remembered, had noticed that the incidents arousing pity and fear ' have tbe greatest effect upon the rnind when they occur unexpectedly and at the same time in consequence of one another2. The Italian Jesuit Alexander Donatus, whose Ars Poetica was popular in Germany in the seventeenth... | |
| Aristotle - 1920 - 100 pàgines
...stretches out a Plot beyond its capabilities, and is thus obliged to twist the sequence of incident. Tragedy, however, is an imitation not only of a complete...consequence of one another ; there is more of the marvellous in them then than if they happened of themselves or by mere chance. Even matters of chance... | |
| Aristotle - 1924 - 376 pàgines
...stretches out a Plot beyond its capabilities, and is thus obliged to twist the sequence of incident. Tragedy, however, is an imitation not only of a complete...consequence of one another ; there is more of the marvellous in them then than if they happened of themselves or by mere ? chance. Even matters of chance... | |
| John Dewar Denniston - 1924 - 276 pàgines
...stretches out a Plot beyond its capabilities, and is thus obliged to twist the sequence of incident. „_ .Tragedy, however, is an imitation not only of a complete...in consequence of one another; there is more of the marvellous in them then than if they happened of themselves or by mere chance. Even matters of chance... | |
| Jacob Gould Schurman, James Edwin Creighton, Frank Thilly, Gustavus Watts Cunningham - 1926 - 622 pàgines
...which is just the effect that the mere recital of the story in Oedipus would have on one." "Tragedy is an imitation not only of a complete action, but...one another; there is more of the marvelous in them then than if they happened by themselves or by mere « Antonio and Mellida, Part 2. chance. Even matters... | |
| Charles Irénée Castel de Saint-Pierre - 1927 - 392 pàgines
...stretches out a Plot beyond its capabilities, and is thus obliged to twist the sequence of incident. Tragedy, however, is an imitation not only of a complete...in consequence of one another; there is more of the marvellous in them then than if they happened of themselves or by mere chance. Even matters of chance... | |
| Aristotle - 1920 - 100 pàgines
...stretches out a Plot beyond its capabilities, and is thus obliged to twist the sequence of incident. Tragedy, however, is an imitation not only of a complete...in consequence of one another; there is more of the marvellous in them then than if they happened of themselves or by mere chance. Even matters of chance... | |
| Albert Hofstadter, Richard Kuhns - 2009 - 730 pàgines
...twist the sequence of incident. Tragedy, however, is an imitation not only of a complete action, MS but also of incidents arousing pity and fear. Such...in consequence of one another; there is more of the marvellous in them then than if they happened of 5 themselves or by mere chance. Even matters of chance... | |
| Stephen David Ross - 1984 - 590 pàgines
...out a Plot beyond its capabilities, and is thus obliged to twist the sequence of incident. [1452'] Tragedy, however, is an imitation not only of a complete...in consequence of one another; there is more of the marvellous in them then than if they happened of themselves or by mere chance. Even matters of chance... | |
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