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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Aristotle, Poetics. Search the whole document.
Found 3 total hits in 1 results.
Verona (Italy) (search for this): section 1455a
An example of this is the scene in the Cyprians by
Dicaeogenes; on seeing the picture he burst into tearsTeucer, returning to Salamis in disguise and seeing a portrait of his dead father
Telamon, burst into tears and was thus discovered. So, too, in The Two
Gentlemen of Verona
Julia is discovered because she swoons on hearing Valentine offer Sylvia to his
rival.: and again in the "Tale of Alcinous,"
Hom. Od. 8.521ff.
hearing the minstrel he remembered and burst into tears; and thus they were
recognized. The fourth kind results
from an inference; for instance, in the Choephoroe "Someone like me
has come; but nobody is like me except Orestes; therefore he has come." And there is
Polyidus'sA Sophist who either wrote an
Iphigeneia with this denouement or more probably suggested in
a work of criticism (cf. Aristot. Poet.
17.6) that Orestes on being led to his fate should speculate aloud
upon the odd coincidence that