| Aristotle - 1968 - 108 pagine
...present).*1 1 Cf. Chapter 26 (59.17-19). See also Note B, p. 67. 1 Or, according to By water's reading: 'There is further an art which imitates by language alone, without harmony, in prose or in (NB We have no term to denote the class that includes the farces of Sophron and Xenarchus, and Socratic... | |
| Albert Hofstadter, Richard Kuhns - 2009 - 730 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...or in verse, and if in verse, either in some one or 1447b in a plurality of metres. This form of imitation is to this day without a name. We have no common... | |
| Stephen David Ross - 1984 - 590 pagine
...(Poetics translated by Ingram Bywater) (New York: Random House), pp. 1455-1465. (Footnotes omitted.) without harmony, in prose or in verse, and if in verse, either in some one or in a plurality of metres. [1447 b ] This form of imitation is to this day without a name. We have no common name for a mime of... | |
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