Campaspe ; Sappho and Phao |
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Page 14
... scene begins with the summoning of the seven philosophers to attend their ruler . At the end of Alexander's previous appearance he had been hailed as Plato's ideal philosopher - king . Yet in this scene the attempt to realise the ideal ...
... scene begins with the summoning of the seven philosophers to attend their ruler . At the end of Alexander's previous appearance he had been hailed as Plato's ideal philosopher - king . Yet in this scene the attempt to realise the ideal ...
Page 25
... scene i establishes Alexander and introduces Cam- paspe ; scene ii establishes the servant boys and talks about Apelles and the philosophers ; scene iii establishes the philosophers and defines Diogenes ' relation to the others . In Act ...
... scene i establishes Alexander and introduces Cam- paspe ; scene ii establishes the servant boys and talks about Apelles and the philosophers ; scene iii establishes the philosophers and defines Diogenes ' relation to the others . In Act ...
Page 289
... scene is unchanged , with Cupid and Venus remaining onstage . As Bond notes ( 11.563 ) , their dialogue may be designed to suggest a movement towards Sappho's palace , but at the scene's end Venus can exit into the forge to await the ...
... scene is unchanged , with Cupid and Venus remaining onstage . As Bond notes ( 11.563 ) , their dialogue may be designed to suggest a movement towards Sappho's palace , but at the scene's end Venus can exit into the forge to await the ...
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Common terms and phrases
affection Alexander answer Apelles appears arrows beauty Blackfriars Blount Bond called Callipho Campaspe cause characters cites comedy Compare copy court Criticus Cupid Dent desire Diogenes Drama draw dream edition Elizabethan English Enter Erasmus Euphues evidence example Exit eyes face fair fear fortune give given gods Granichus hand hath head heart Hephestion idea Ismena John king ladies leave less live London look Lyly Lyly's Manes master meaning Mileta mind Molus nature never notes offers painting Pandion performance perhaps philosophers picture play Pliny present printed probably proverbial Psyllus Publilius Syrus Queen question reading reason reference Sappho and Phao scene seems sense Sibylla song speak speech spelling stage story suggests sweet tells thee things thou thought Trachinus turn Venus Vulcan women