to the name of a metre, and talk of elegiac-poets and epic-poets, thinking that they call them poets not by reason of the imitative nature of their work, but indiscriminately by reason of the metre they write in. Even if a theory of medicine or physical... Legends of the Kings of Akkade: The Texts - Pagina 25di Joan Goodnick Westenholz - 1997 - 410 pagineAnteprima limitata - Informazioni su questo libro
| Aristotle - 1920 - 100 pagine
...by the rhythms of his attitudes, may represent men's characters, as well as what they do and suffer. There is further an art which imitates by language...tack on ' poet ' to the name of a metre, and talk of elegiac-poets and epic-poets, thinking that they call them poets not by reason of the imitative nature... | |
| John Dewar Denniston - 1924 - 276 pagine
...by the rhythms of his attitudes, may represent men's characters, as well as what they do and suffer. There is further an art which imitates by language...tack on " poet " to the name of a metre, and talk of elegiac-poets and epic-poets, thinking that they call them poets not by reason of the imitative nature... | |
| Aristotle - 1920 - 100 pagine
...the imitation in the two instances were in trimeters or elegiacs or some other kind of verse—though it is the way with people to tack on 'poet' to the name of a metre, and talk of elegiac-poets and epic-poets, thinking that they call them poets not by reason of the imitative nature... | |
| Albert Hofstadter, Richard Kuhns - 2009 - 730 pagine
...form of imitation is to this day without a name. We have no common name for a mime of Sophron or 10 Xenarchus and a Socratic Conversation; and we should...tack on 'poet' to the name of a metre, and talk of elegiac-poets and epic-poets, thinking that they call them 15 poets not by reason of the imitative... | |
| Stephen David Ross - 1984 - 590 pagine
...the imitation in the two instances were in trimeters or elegiacs or some other kind of verse—though it is the way with people to tack on 'poet' to the name of a metre, and talk of elegiac-poets and epic-poets, thinking that they call them poets not by reason of the imitative nature... | |
| James A. Arieti - 2005 - 420 pagine
...the reader. Aristotle himself takes up the question of how to treat the ancient thinkers. He writes, It is the way with people to tack on "poet" to the name of a meter, and talk of elegiac poets and epic poets, thinking that they call them poets — not by reason... | |
| Washington University (Saint Louis, Mo.) - 1918 - 296 pagine
...denominating as epic whatever was couched in the heroic measure is censured by Aristotle (Poet. 1.1447bl3ff.): It is the way with people to tack on 'poet' to the name of a metre, and talk of elegiac-poets and epic-poets, thinking that they call them poeta not by reason of the imitative nature... | |
| Washington University (Saint Louis, Mo.) - 1918 - 512 pagine
...denominating as epic whatever was couched in the heroic measure is censured by Aristotle (Poet. 1.1447bl3ff.): It is the way with people to tack on 'poet' to the name of a metre, and talk of elegiac-poets and epic-poets, thinking that they call them poets not by reason of the imitative nature... | |
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