Theatre TapestryJarrolds, 1949 - 263 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 27
Pagina 55
... Romans , were not familiars of the Greeks . What burning urgency could the average Roman develop in search for spiritual evaluations which held Grecian audiences enthralled ? Greek dramatists sought right , Roman audiences were trained ...
... Romans , were not familiars of the Greeks . What burning urgency could the average Roman develop in search for spiritual evaluations which held Grecian audiences enthralled ? Greek dramatists sought right , Roman audiences were trained ...
Pagina 57
... Roman dramatist can be said to have sought , or to have achieved , unique or independent importance . Their work lacked grandeur in con- cept and genius in statement . They were , in effect , too much the children of their times to ...
... Roman dramatist can be said to have sought , or to have achieved , unique or independent importance . Their work lacked grandeur in con- cept and genius in statement . They were , in effect , too much the children of their times to ...
Pagina 61
... Roman conquest of Britain was not undertaken until nearly a century later , when in A.D. 43 Aulus Plautius landed in Kent with forty thousand men , embarking on the campaign which reached the farthest frontiers of Waeclinga Straet , or ...
... Roman conquest of Britain was not undertaken until nearly a century later , when in A.D. 43 Aulus Plautius landed in Kent with forty thousand men , embarking on the campaign which reached the farthest frontiers of Waeclinga Straet , or ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
actor actress Aeschylus amongst appeared Aristophanes arrived attack audience became believed Betterton British Burbage century Charles chorus Christian Clytemnestra comedy contemporary Covent Garden curtain daughter Davenant death delight Dionysus display drama dramatists Drury Lane Dryden Elizabethan England English Euripides faith father Faustus favour festival Frodsham Frohman gained Garrick girl gods Greek Hawtree Henry heroes humour husband interest James Burbage John John Philip Kemble Kemble King King's ladies later live London Lord lover Marlowe Marlowe's marriage married mistress musical National Theatre Nell Gwynn night opened Oresteia Osiris Penchard Pepys performance play players playwrights presented priests produced Prometheus Queen religious Restoration role Roman Sarah scene School for Scandal Shakespeare Siddons Sir Laurence Olivier social Sophocles stage story Street Tamburlaine Theatre Royal theatre's theatrical history theme thou throne tragedy voice wife witnessed woman women writing young Zeus