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1 V | to confine itself to a single revolution of the sun, or
2 XIII | Tragedy; it possesses no single tragic quality; it neither
3 XIII | plot should, therefore, be single in its issue, rather than
4 XXII | But the alteration of a single word by Euripides, who employed
5 XXIII| narrative in form and employs a single meter, the plot manifestly
6 XXIII| should have for its subject a single action, whole and complete,
7 XXIII| necessity present not a single action, but a single period,
8 XXIII| not a single action, but a single period, and all that happened
9 XXIII| follows another, and yet no single result is thereby produced.
10 XXIII| not easily embraced in a single view. If, again, he had
11 XXIII| As it is, he detaches a single portion, and admits as episodes
12 XXIII| All other poets take a single hero, a single period, or
13 XXIII| poets take a single hero, a single period, or an action single
14 XXIII| single period, or an action single indeed, but with a multiplicity
15 XXIV | of being brought within a single view. This condition will
16 XXIV | tragedies presented at a single sitting.~Epic poetry has,
17 XXVI | attainable, an imitation of a single action.~If, then, tragedy
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