The Spirit of Molière: An InterpretationPrinceton University Press, 1940 - 250 pages |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-3 sur 35
Page 51
... writing for the theater for several years . Though he was conscious of no diminution in his talent , he felt that after twenty years of writing he had grown " too old to be in fashion . " Corneille , the most famous among the serious ...
... writing for the theater for several years . Though he was conscious of no diminution in his talent , he felt that after twenty years of writing he had grown " too old to be in fashion . " Corneille , the most famous among the serious ...
Page 177
... writing , at least profane writing , is tinged with satire . The work of Boileau is almost exclusively satirical , and Racine , when he turns from serious writing to satire , was so cruelly successful at it that Boileau himself , on one ...
... writing , at least profane writing , is tinged with satire . The work of Boileau is almost exclusively satirical , and Racine , when he turns from serious writing to satire , was so cruelly successful at it that Boileau himself , on one ...
Page 228
... writing determined so completely the form in which new thoughts were to be cloaked , who are largely re- sponsible for this bending of the French mind to a comic view ? It is true , of course , as a recent writer has said , ' that ...
... writing determined so completely the form in which new thoughts were to be cloaked , who are largely re- sponsible for this bending of the French mind to a comic view ? It is true , of course , as a recent writer has said , ' that ...
Table des matières
LIllustre Théâtre or the Béjart Contract | 3 |
Drama in 1643 | 19 |
A Wandering Apprentice | 36 |
Droits d'auteur | |
9 autres sections non affichées
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
action actors Alceste appear Arnolphe audience become beginning Béjart bien bourgeois called century character comedy comic complete contemporary contract Corneille course court desire Don Garcie drama Ecole entirely fact farce father feeling felt Femmes figure finally France French give given hand human idea ideal important interest Italian Italy King known later laughter least less lived lover manners Maris marriage married Mascarille matter mind Mlle de Scudéry Molière Molière's Monsieur moral nature never original Paris performance perhaps period play plot possible Précieuses present Prince probably qu'il question reason remain respect royal rules satire says scene seems sense serious Sganarelle situation social society spirit stage success Tartuffe taste theater tion tout tragedy troupe turns valet writing written young