Studies in Seventeenth-century French LiteratureJean-Jacques Demorest To Morris Bishop, 'honnête homme' and rare example of the gentleman-scholar, this volume is offered as a most cordial expression of admiration and respect. Friends, students, and contributors are privileged to honor the sound elegance of his scholarship, the recognize the fruitful devotion that he has always shown to Cornell, and the hail the earnest charm of his demeanor and style. |
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Page 78
... Rome have become identified . Therefore Camille's magnificent rhetorical attack on Rome - no less an at- tack than the military assault of Curiace - is at the same time the most telling of her thrusts against Horace : Rome , l'unique ...
... Rome have become identified . Therefore Camille's magnificent rhetorical attack on Rome - no less an at- tack than the military assault of Curiace - is at the same time the most telling of her thrusts against Horace : Rome , l'unique ...
Page 86
... Rome are descendants of Albans and relatives of Albans . The two cities are two parts of a single people , as the forces they represent are two aspects of the protagonist and of every man . The war is a civil war , one people torn ...
... Rome are descendants of Albans and relatives of Albans . The two cities are two parts of a single people , as the forces they represent are two aspects of the protagonist and of every man . The war is a civil war , one people torn ...
Page 89
... Rome , waiting on the periphery to attack the weakened victors in the fight between Albe and Rome , as Corneille's Camille at- tacks the victorious Horace and , in him , Rome , the offspring through Albe of the Lavinium of Aeneas . If ...
... Rome , waiting on the periphery to attack the weakened victors in the fight between Albe and Rome , as Corneille's Camille at- tacks the victorious Horace and , in him , Rome , the offspring through Albe of the Lavinium of Aeneas . If ...
Contents
CommonSense Remarks on the French Baroque | 1 |
Malherbe and His Influence | 20 |
SaintAmant le poète sauvé des eaux | 35 |
Copyright | |
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admiration Agrippine Alceste Alceste's Andromaque Ardaric Ariosto artist Attila audience baroque bien Boileau Britannicus c'est Camille Célimène characters classical coeur Contes Corneille Corneille's coup critics Curiace d'une death Dieu discourse Dom Juan dramatic esprit être expression fact fait faut femmes final Fontaine Fontaine's France French Furioso Garcie grand hero homme Honorie Horace human Ildione j'ai jamais Jean Racine Jean Rousset Joconde Juan Junie king l'amour L'Art poétique l'esprit l'on l'onde La Fontaine Le Misanthrope lines literary literature Longinus Malherbe Malherbe's misanthrope Moïse Molière Molière's moral n'est Narcisse nature Néron Oeuvres Paris Pascal passion Paul Bénichou pensée de derrière Pierre Corneille play poem poet poetic poetry princess qu'elle qu'il qu'on Racine Racine's raison reader rien Rome Sabine Saint-Amant scene seul sophistry sous style sublime suggest Tartuffe temps theme tion tout tragedy Valamir Valéry Valéry's vers veut voir words writer yeux