The narrator's diaries record her friend's distress, and the tragedies that result. |
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Shakespeare wrote tragedies, romance, history, comedy and problem plays all with great success. |
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Seneca produced his own versions of tragedies by Sophocles, Euripides, and Aeschylus. |
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Let's be honest here, Shakespeare's tragedies are filled with dialogue, monologue, and soliloquy. |
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The Play of King Lear is a great tragic play that many tragedies try to compare to. |
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The characters in the tragedies of Sophocles resist all warnings and inescapably meet with disaster. |
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One of the tragedies of documentary filmmaking is not being able to include everyone in the movie. |
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Three of these plays were usually tragedies, plays that focused on a heroic character who falls due to his own folly. |
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Unfortunately it is often the cause of innumerable avoidable tragedies too. |
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Between 1776 and 1794, Cowley produced ten comedies, two tragedies, a farce, and many poems. |
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Comedies, tragedies, musicals and dramas make this a remarkably diverse theater season. |
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This last and driest of Shakespeare's tragedies is, in some ways, his most unusual. |
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Then again, it's a theme of war films to make tragedies all the more tragic, isn't it? |
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Did all the gory deaths he witnessed while serving in the Canadian ambulance corps in the Second World War help him play tragedies? |
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One example is the accompanying contemporary, or pop music, with Greek tragedies or Shakespearean plays. |
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Rather, focus on Robben Island concentrates attention onto the larger tragedies of race and politics in the continent of Africa. |
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The way of avoiding such tragedies is for everyone to follow his own inclinations, more or less as they arise. |
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And this being one of Shakespeare's comedies, rather than tragedies, all's well that ends well! |
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Didn't Aristotle say that characters in tragedies are better than us and characters in comedies are worse than us? |
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Here is a performer whose personal tragedies have always informed her public persona. |
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On a more informal level, Italian coffee houses often presented light comedies, heroic tragedies, and dialect plays sponsored by drama clubs. |
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Real tragedies do not need hyperbole, for they are intrinsically hyperbolic. |
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Strong private-property rights helped to avoid the tragedies of both overuse and underinvestment. |
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A feeling of peacefulness overtook her and, for once, she forgot the recent tragedies. |
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The string of tragedies overshadowed the coalition's triumphs of mid-August and September. |
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The plays are printed roughly in the Folio order, comedies first, followed by histories, tragedies, and the late romances. |
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In this report should be your triumphs and tragedies of the past week, the high points and the low points you hit. |
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The upper line that runs across the base of the fingers is the heart line which reveals tragedies in a person's lifetime if broken. |
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And the Greeks, famous for their tragedies, really knew how to plot a story for maximum impact. |
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It initiated a vogue for revenge theatre that lasted for decades, and it shares many elements with the greatest of all revenge tragedies, Hamlet. |
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The author witnessed several tragedies, including one small-scale massacre by a neighboring population. |
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There are enough tragedies in our day-to-day lives without adding some due to our own personal negligence. |
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His beautifully judged film matches the moments of comedy with glimpses of the unspeakable tragedies that can send a life into tailspin. |
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All Greek tragedies have choruses, who take on the roles of observers, narrators, commentators and critics. |
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In life some tragedies are strange and unexplainable and the passing of a young person in the prime of life is perhaps the most poignant of all. |
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The buppies generally condemn the B-boys, individuals molded by the tragedies of underclass life. |
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Public tumults and tragedies gradually recede into the past and become less emotionally fraught for all of us. |
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Bunclody fire service is being kept very busy at the moment dealing with chimney fires, but no tragedies have taken place. |
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The best way to prevent tragedies like this is for people to drink in moderation. |
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Recent tragedies have been afflicted with a certain element of bizarreness, hitherto not experienced by humankind. |
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It's one of the great tragedies of human life that we tend to save our best compliments for eulogies. |
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But haven't there been other tragedies on this scale, the accusing voices say. |
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What terrible tragedies have been enacted over the centuries in this battle between the weak and timid Fly and the cruel and bloodthirsty Spider! |
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Incompetent and dangerous laboratories would be weeded out and further tragedies like these minimized. |
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He tried to get on with life, putting the tragedies behind him and spending as much time with his remaining grandchildren as possible. |
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The Tokugawa Period gave rise to the bunraku puppet drama and kabuki theater, for which Chikamatsu wrote tragedies. |
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Many modern medical miracles occur in hospitals, unfortunately a few tragedies also occur. |
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From nature to human tragedies, the photographs tell tales reams of paper cannot. |
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He translated a wide range of Greek programs, including Greek tragedies, modern Greek poetry and the lyrics of rebetika songs. |
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The experience gave her a huge lift, as she has suffered from several personal tragedies in recent years. |
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And the deaths flowing from natural tragedies such as this seem very arbitrary, unfair and unacceptable. |
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When people come in with tragedies about how they aren't getting it on with their lady, he stays cool. |
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But critics fear more tragedies could occur unless reckless behaviour is tackled. |
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This refers to efforts to strive to prevent disputes, while shielding the weak from oppression, famine, poverty and other tragedies. |
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It was he said perhaps a thank you for help given in time of tragedies and difficulties which was only part of his priestly duties. |
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A series of tragedies forced them to fight the three by-elections that brought them to the political precipice. |
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The avoidance of such tragedies should be the primary focus of all responsible people that allow children access to the farm. |
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The world is a difficult place, and many tragedies have befallen mankind in its upward climb from savagery, some of them quite recently. |
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It speaks to the way life comes and goes, with its beauties and tragedies, through its balletic recording of transience and impermanence. |
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Both films are tragedies dealing with the rise and fall of a man within a sordid industry. |
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These days, even the brief breathing space of the close season is full of tales of tragedies foretold. |
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He brought an extra life to the character who stands listless before a deluge of tragedies as his children die in succession. |
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Professor Jones recites the grim litany of human tragedies that have plagued our planet over the last 100 years. |
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In any given year, there are bound to be at least a few major disasters or tragedies or deaths of major figures. |
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You can't make flivvers without steel-and you can't make tragedies without social instability. |
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The quest for truth, North insists, is not about apportioning blame or naming scapegoats, but the prevention of future tragedies. |
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Mass congregations for a religious purpose must be banned, to avoid such tragedies as well as to avoid communal conflagrations. |
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But there is no rose without a thorn and they stand for life's difficulties and tragedies. |
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I personally have no doubt that if the road had been dualled, the recent tragedies there would not have happened. |
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In Racine's tragedies, confusion often reigns, and from it a tragic reversal takes place. |
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She is determined to help improve health care in developing nations, to prevent tragedies like her natural mother's early death. |
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The patients to undergo this new medical procedure have been seriously disfigured by burns, serious accidents or personal tragedies. |
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Pastors' presence as community leaders is most evident after collective tragedies such as fatal accidents and violent crimes. |
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The tragedies caused by accident, human error and carelessness have become the most significant in the early history of the region. |
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But unfortunately there is the bad news as well, the tragedies, accidents and the deaths. |
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You understand, sort of, when people die of natural tragedies, whether it's fires or tornadoes or hurricanes or whatever. |
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Random accidents and everyday tragedies become just another ratings-boosting gimmick, filling airtime before the next disaster strikes. |
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These frightening statistics speak for themselves and behind these figures there lie terrible human tragedies and unimaginable suffering. |
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Terrible human tragedies and unimaginable suffering result from fatal accidents in farming each year. |
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The climactic assault on Matterhorn depicts the chaos, randomness, exhilaration, and tragedies of combat. |
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He spoke of the present-day tragedies and turmoil that struck the city while he and his classmates were in the academy. |
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These protagonists want something just out of reach, and end up being the unintentional authors of their own astringent tragedies. |
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We have no Scottish Jacobean tragedies, no Scottish Restoration comedies. |
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We ritualize this process to make sure we don't allow the grief of great tragedies to blind us with mob fury, inflamed judgments and uninformed reasoning. |
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This first mid air collision forced authorities to devise the air lane system in which airlines are allotted strict routes, times and schedules to avoid such tragedies. |
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Public tumults and tragedies, even ones as dreadful as that of September 11, gradually recede into the past and become less emotionally fraught for all of us. |
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It contains heartfelt stories and reminiscences as he remembers them, triumphs and tragedies that are part and parcel of a commander's or staff officer's career. |
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Indeed, though most Americans will embrace some type of solemn memorial today, there is resistance to dwelling on the horrifying tragedies of a year ago. |
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Like the best Shakespearean tragedies, each player is set up carefully, so that each one causes as much damage as possible on the way down to rock bottom. |
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Why do we only talk about gun control after the most unbearable national tragedies? |
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Together, they reveal their histories, teaching and learning from the shared tragedies of the past. |
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In the absence of anything else, the day is just a series of personal tragedies repeated over and over again, with an entire nation sharing in the pain and the grief. |
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He saw comedies, tragedies, dramas, shows of acrobatics and clowning, all accompanied by fine music, and all this performed by a family of only twenty members. |
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Three utterly madcap men in tights and sneakers take the theatre by storm as they gallop through the tragedies, histories and comedies at a speed that will leave you gasping. |
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Fifty years ago, we were just beginning to learn some important lessons from natural disasters, epidemics, and manmade tragedies. |
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And if this was done as it should be in our country, maybe there would not be tragedies like the tragedy in Moscow today. |
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The release of the Newtown photos may finally move enough people to support laws that will prevent future tragedies. |
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The comparison of two tragedies might also raise a question about international policy toward the Syrian refugees today. |
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Or does it voice all the tragedies of human existence, not only the Shoah? |
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While migrant ship tragedies at sea happen all too often, the latest sinking appears to have been no accident. |
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Having lost his wife to this disease, Kevin knew that a slice of the profits from sign-up and monthly renewal fees could go some way in preventing similar tragedies. |
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The Benton and Wilkins families have both been visited by this devil, both have suffered the worst tragedies. |
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Generally flooded by cold lighting, Boyd's and Piper's stage provided a ferociously unromantic setting for this most famous of romantic tragedies. |
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Surely one of life's greatest tragedies is that man can always come up with explanations for the unspeakable cruelties people inflict on each other. |
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That means that we potentially have two tragedies brewing here. |
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Test your knowledge of their on-screen and off-screen triumphs, tragedies, and occasional tackiness by matching a dozen fun factoids with the correct diva. |
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About 150 cases of dog poisoning a year are reported to the carabinieri in Tuscany and we have personal knowledge of two tragedies involving neighbours' pets. |
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I say this, even though this was the time I suffered severe heartaches and love tragedies of such great scale that my poor innocent heart could barely cope with the betrayal. |
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In high school, teachers spend a great deal of time guiding students through the rigors of Shakespeare's tragedies and histories, but what about the comedies? |
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But child mortality figures indicate many more private tragedies. |
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As a committed family man he would have felt those tragedies keenly. |
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The fate of the 306 British Empire soldiers executed by firing squad, mainly on the Western Front, had been one of the hidden tragedies of the First World War. |
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Every once in a while a boxer dies in the ring or a soccer player collapses on the field, and such tragedies make us acutely aware of our own frailty. |
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Naturally, there is some friction between the young men, but there are some unspoken truths and tragedies that lead to the family splitting up, for good. |
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The loss of life was terrible, but it was no more than one in a series of occasional tragedies caused by the misguided beliefs of cults and their members. |
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This is about a group of friends and their romantic hang-ups, their lives, loves and deceptions, triumphs and tragedies that climax to surprising finale. |
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A decade later the vision would be modified to reflect the glories of a bygone era, and the tragedies of interrupted lives and unfulfilled destinies. |
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Convicting doctors of manslaughter may satisfy a desire for retribution, but deters careful consideration of the ways of preventing tragedies from recurring. |
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That's because Oxford classicists have finally unwrapped the Oxyrhynchus Papyri, discovering hundreds of lost Greek comedies, tragedies and epic poems. |
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Macbeth is an anomaly among Shakespeare's tragedies in certain critical ways. |
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Seneca's tragedies greatly influenced the growth of tragic drama in Europe. |
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Some examples of tragedies include William Shakespeare's Hamlet, and also John Webster's play The Duchess of Malfi. |
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Comedies were one of the two original play types of Ancient Greece, along with tragedies. |
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He suffered a series of tragedies that nearly drove him to madness. |
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Naevius's dramas were mainly reworkings of Greek originals, but he also created tragedies based on Roman myths and history. |
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Towards the end of her life, family tragedies overwhelmed her, although she met these reverses with grace and fortitude. |
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Augustus Taber Murray explains that the depiction of a character was limited by the circumstances under which Greek tragedies were presented. |
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If people are upminded about future possibilities, present tragedies diminish in psychological consequence. |
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The stichomythias are just as necessary in Sophocles' tragedies as are his choruses. |
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Roman literary theatre tradition is particularly well represented in Latin literature by the tragedies of Seneca. |
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Other forms of traditional narrative verse relate the outcomes of battles or describe tragedies or natural disasters. |
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However, the majority of stagings were of lower farces and much more serious and domestic tragedies. |
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Murray also declares that the inherent characteristics of Greek tragedies are important in the makeup of the characters. |
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Other revenge tragedies include The Changeling written by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley. |
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The fire took the lives of six firemen and drew national attention as one of the worst firefighting tragedies in the late 20th century. |
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Historical topics were especially popular, not to mention the usual comedies and tragedies. |
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And also his bravery in exposing all the triumphs and tragedies of his personal life. |
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The greater Dionysia were held at Athens in March or April, and were celebrated with elaborate performances of tragedies and comedies. |
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Docudramas show half-truths about the tragedies of real people while audiences think that they are watching the whole truth. |
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Shakespeare wrote plays in a variety of genres, including histories, tragedies, comedies and the late romances, or tragicomedies. |
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After Hamlet, Shakespeare varied his poetic style further, particularly in the more emotional passages of the late tragedies. |
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If hamartia is culpable error, tragedies that end up with calamities do not call into question the teleology of human events. |
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The plots of Shakespeare's tragedies often hinge on such fatal errors or flaws, which overturn order and destroy the hero and those he loves. |
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A series of tragedies and betrayals blindsides Selma, and blindness becomes the least of her problems. |
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That Euripides' taste ran often to such gruesomenesses is indicated by the plots of some of his lost tragedies. |
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So there are a few things we can do to try to prevent these tragedies. |
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Many critics believe that Shakespeare's greatest tragedies represent the peak of his art. |
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In this vein, Peter Tarlow defines dark tourism as the tendency to visit the scenes of tragedies or historically noteworthy deaths, which continue to impact our lives. |
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The collection has humorous and sympathetic portraits of Newfoundland characters, and creates an elegiac mood in poems concerning sea tragedies or Great War losses. |
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One of the problems is that the tragedies we want to write out of our current contexts are inconsonant with traditional definitions of what tragedy actually signifies. |
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They can be tragedies or comedies, but are often neither of these. |
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I really enjoyed Shakespeare's tragedies more than his histories. |
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He retired in 1940, but personal tragedies saw him lose his fortune and he ended up bankrupt, having to return to the ring at the age of 36 to make a living. |
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Ratisbon is the city from which our voyager starts, and many are the legends which he has picked up of castles and monasteries, enough for six tragedies and sixty melodrames. |
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Particularly in the tragedies, with their lengthy speeches abstracted from Sallust and Cicero, Augustan critics saw a writer whose learning had swamped his aesthetic judgment. |
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Apart from two tragedies, Sejanus and Catiline, that largely failed to impress Renaissance audiences, Jonson's work for the public theatres was in comedy. |
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But Swank was more concerned about her white, ruffled cocktail dress, which suffered one of the worst tragedies that can befall an actress about to hit the red carpet. |
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Unlike the introverted Hamlet, whose fatal flaw is hesitation, the heroes of the tragedies that followed, Othello and King Lear, are undone by hasty errors of judgement. |
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The film is based on the extraordinary tragedies of author Kuki Gallmann. |
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The family of a motorist killed by a Welsh lorry driver who fell asleep at the wheel have launched a road safety campaign in a bid to prevent similar tragedies. |
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In the USA the Salvation Army's first major forays into disaster relief resulted from the tragedies of the Galveston Hurricane of 1900 and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. |
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Shakespeare was, not surprisingly, Anglocentric in his histories, but his tragedies and some of his comedies ranged widely across the known world, from Italy to Egypt. |
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The passionate and paradoxical desire to end desires leads only to the continuation of life in all its variousness, confusions, tragedies, and improper desires. |
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He then wrote mainly tragedies until about 1608, including Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, and Macbeth, considered some of the finest works in the English language. |
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How can a book, any book, published today about the Great Leap Forward fail to mention or even hint at this, the most horrendous of all 20th-century Chinese tragedies? |
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Shakespeare's works include the 36 plays printed in the First Folio of 1623, listed according to their folio classification as comedies, histories, and tragedies. |
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Thirdly, characters in tragedies include incongruities and idiosyncrasies. |
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