Six Great Playwrights: Sophocles, Shakespeare, Moliére, Sheridan, Ibsen, ShawHamish Hamilton, 1960 - 192ÆäÀÌÁö |
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92 ÆäÀÌÁö
... laughter , a better medicine , surely , for human folly than anger , or a sneer . From the time of Les Précieuses ( ' précieux ' , by the way , was not a derogatory term until this play had made it so ) , the scope of Molière's work was ...
... laughter , a better medicine , surely , for human folly than anger , or a sneer . From the time of Les Précieuses ( ' précieux ' , by the way , was not a derogatory term until this play had made it so ) , the scope of Molière's work was ...
94 ÆäÀÌÁö
... laughter and at the same time the most deeply rooted in reality . The very poetry of the burlesque , it is also ... laughter Molière was writing comedies of a different sort , comedies in which the laughter is more inward , an in ...
... laughter and at the same time the most deeply rooted in reality . The very poetry of the burlesque , it is also ... laughter Molière was writing comedies of a different sort , comedies in which the laughter is more inward , an in ...
100 ÆäÀÌÁö
... laughter in Molière welled up from deep places . It is only those who are acquainted with grief whose laughter rings true . People have speculated upon how much of himself Molière put into his plays . The question , at least in that ...
... laughter in Molière welled up from deep places . It is only those who are acquainted with grief whose laughter rings true . People have speculated upon how much of himself Molière put into his plays . The question , at least in that ...
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