| Aristotle, Thomas Twining - 1812 - 388 էջ
...it be wanting in all the manuscripts.. — Of the .Scylla, .nothing nets, in the Iphigenia at Aulis; for there, the Iphigenia, who supplicates for life,...act, necessarily, or probably, in such a manner, and tJiis event, , to be the necessary or probable consequence of that. — 7 Hence it is evident, is known.... | |
| Aristotle - 1815 - 492 էջ
...the Iphigenia at Anils'"; for there the Iphigenia, who supplicates for life, has no re•cntblance to the Iphigenia of the conclusion. In the manners, as in the fuble, the poet should always aim either at what is necessary, or what -is probable ; so that such... | |
| William Cullen Bryant, Robert Charles Sands, Henry J. Anderson - 1825 - 502 էջ
...resembling and uniform. We have an instance of want of uniformity of manners in the Iphigenia at Aulis, for there the Iphigenia who supplicates for life,...resemblance to the Iphigenia of the conclusion. In order to give the manners boldness and lustre, they ought to be contrasted with each other, as the... | |
| Greeks - 1827 - 1206 էջ
...Ulysses in Scylla, and, in the speech of M^lanippe : of ununiform manners, in the Iphigenia at A tills ; for there, the Iphigenia, who supplicates for life,...what is necessary, or what is probable; so that such character shall appear to speak or act, necessarily, or probably, in such a manner, and this event,... | |
| Philip Wentworth Buckham - 1830 - 628 էջ
...Ulysses in Scylla, and in the speech of Melanippe : of ununiform manners, in the Iphigenia at Âulis; for there, the Iphigenia, who supplicates for life,...appear to speak or act, necessarily, or probably, in stich a manner, and this event, to be the necessary or probable consequence of that. — Hence it is... | |
| John William Donaldson - 1836 - 636 էջ
...Ulysses in Scylla, and in the speech of Melanippe : of ununiform manners, in the Iphigenia at Aulis ; for there, the Iphigenia, who supplicates for life,...no resemblance to the Iphigenia of the conclusion. also of a fable should arise out of the fable itself, and not depend upon machinery, as in the Medea,... | |
| John Richard Darley (Bp. of Kilmore, Elphin and Ardagh) - 1840 - 580 էջ
...Ulysses in Scylla, and in the speech of Melanippe : of wnuniform manners, in the Iphigenia at Aulis ; for there, the Iphigenia, who supplicates for life, has no resemblance to tho Iphigenia of the conclusion. In the manners, as in the fable, the poet should always aim, either... | |
| John William Donaldson - 1849 - 642 էջ
...Ulysses in Scylla, and in the speech of Melanippe : of ununiform manners, in the Iphigenia at Aulis ; for there the Iphigenia, who supplicates for life,...be the necessary or probable consequence of that. — Hence it is evident, that the development also of a plot should arise out of the plot itself, and... | |
| August Witzchel - 1850 - 172 էջ
...un-uniform," and complains of the violation of this canon in the " Iphigenia in Aulis" of Euripides, "for the Iphigenia who supplicates for life has no resemblance to the Iphigenia of the conclusion." To these requisites Aristotle adds another, which he considers the most important of all — ideality.... | |
| Aristotle - 1851 - 90 էջ
...Scylla ; and in the speech of * (6) Menalippe ; of ununiform (c) manners, in the Iphigenia in Aulis — for there, the Iphigenia who supplicates for life,...be the necessary or probable consequence of that, — Hence it is evident, that the development also of a fable should arise also out of the fable itself,... | |
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