Liverpool Classical Monthly, Volumi 1-3John Pinsent John Pinsent., 1976 |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 79
Pagina 3
... poet who composes in his head for rec- itation constructs his tale quite differently from a poet who relies upon writing , that an audience which listens to a recited poem must have events put to it differently from a public which reads ...
... poet who composes in his head for rec- itation constructs his tale quite differently from a poet who relies upon writing , that an audience which listens to a recited poem must have events put to it differently from a public which reads ...
Pagina 14
... poet liable to surface inconsistency or factual contradiction . The answer seems to be twofold . First , the oral poet concentrates on the immediate scene , and is not concerned with , or does not even notice , minor inconsist- encies ...
... poet liable to surface inconsistency or factual contradiction . The answer seems to be twofold . First , the oral poet concentrates on the immediate scene , and is not concerned with , or does not even notice , minor inconsist- encies ...
Pagina 17
... poet if his method allows blatant contradiction between different parts ? Where is the unity of composition ? The key answer to this is to point out that the contradictory assertions come exclusively in speeches , not in the poet's own ...
... poet if his method allows blatant contradiction between different parts ? Where is the unity of composition ? The key answer to this is to point out that the contradictory assertions come exclusively in speeches , not in the poet's own ...
Sommario
CONTENTS the copyright of which remains in each case with the author | 3 |
A problem in the history 910 | 9 |
Factions and family trees LCM 11976 | 1 |
2 sezioni non visualizzate
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Parole e frasi comuni
accept Aeneas Aeschylus already appear argued argument beginning Caesar called Catullus century Cicero classical clear close context Copyright course Crassus death described discussion early edition Editor epic epigram evidence example existence explained expression fact final further give given Greek Homeric important indicate interest issues Italy kind language later least Liverpool Livy London meaning mention nature original Oxford particular passage perhaps period Plautus play poem poet poetry political Pompey position possible present probably published question reason reference remains Roman Rome seems Senate sense shows similar simply sources Spartan speech story suggest surely Tacitus taken thing thought tradition true Turnus Virgil wanted καὶ