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" COMEDY, as was said before, is an imitation of bad characters; bad, not with respect to every sort of vice, but to the RIDICULOUS only, as being a species of turpitude or deformity ; since it may be defined to be — a fault or deformity of such a sort... "
The Theatre of the Greeks: Or, The History, Literature, and Criticism of the ... - 136. oldal
szerző: Philip Wentworth Buckham - 1830 - 572 oldal
Teljes nézet - Információ erről a könyvről

Aristotle's Treatise on Poetry, Translated: With Notes on the ..., 1. kötet

Aristotle, Thomas Twining - 1812 - 386 oldal
...it may be defined to be—a fault or deformity of such a sort-as is neither painful nor destructive. A ridiculous face, for example, is something ugly...authorized by the magistrate, and carried on at the public ex pence : it was, at first, a private and voluntary exhibition. From the time, indeed, when it began...

Aristotle's Treatise on Poetry, Translated: With Notes on the ..., 1. kötet

Aristotle, Thomas Twining - 1812 - 380 oldal
...may be defined to be — a fault or deformity of such a sort as is neither painful nor destructive. A ridiculous face, for example, is something ugly...remain in obscurity. For it was not till late, that vo L. i. I Comedy Comedy was authorized by the magistrate, and carried on at the public expence : it...

Aristotle's Treatise on Poetry, Translated: With Notes on the Translation ...

Aristotle - 1815 - 492 oldal
...it may be defined3* to be a fault or deformity of such a sort as is neither painful nor destructive. A ridiculous face, for example, is something ugly...successive improvements of tragedy, and the respective author? of them, have not escaped our knowledge; but those of comedy, from the little attention that...

The Grecian Drama: A Treatise on the Dramatic Literature of the Greeks

John Richard Darley (Bp. of Kilmore, Elphin and Ardagh) - 1840 - 580 oldal
...detail would perhaps be a task of some length. •ytXoTov iariv ajuaprijjud rt — KCU ov itiOapriKov). A ridiculous face, for example, is something ugly...obscurity. For it was not till late, that Comedy was authorised by the magistrate, and carried on at the public expense : it was, at first, a private and...

The Poetics of Aristotle, tr. by Twining [ed. by H. Hamilton].

Aristotle - 1851 - 90 oldal
...may be defined tobe(6) — a fault or deformity of such a sort as is neither painful nor destructive. A ridiculous face, for example, is something ugly and distorted, but not so as to cause pain. («) Twining tells us that the trochaic measure is peculiarly adapted to dancing, as it is the same...

Theatre of the Greeks ... information relative to the rise, progress, and ...

Greeks - 1860 - 904 oldal
...painful nor destructive (то yàp yeXoîop «mi' ¿рартгцла TI — «ai où фварпког). A. ridiculous face, for example, is something ugly...its origin, remain in obscurity. For it was not till Lite that Comedy was authorized by the magistrate, and carried on at the public expense : it was, at...

Laocoon

Gotthold Ephraim Lessing - 1874 - 456 oldal
...it may be defined to be a. faul/ or deformity of such a sort as is neither painful nor destructive. A ridiculous face, for example, is something ugly and distorted, but not so as to cause pain'. The third and, I think, the most remarkable passage is in his Rhetoric : 'Ewe! 8e TO pav8dveiv Tf r)&v...

Laocoon

Gotthold Ephraim Lessing - 1874 - 444 oldal
...it may be defined to be a. fault or deformity of such a sort as is neither painful nor destructive. A ridiculous face, for example, is something ugly and distorted, but not so as to cause pain! The third and, I think, the most remarkable passage is in his Rhetoric : *Ea.fi St TO fiavdavfiv rt flSii...




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