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  1. Tragedy, according to Aristotle, “is an imitation of an action that is admirable, complete and possesses magnitude.” Tragedy is written in “language made pleasurable” (meaning that language that has rhythm and melody), and it can be separated into parts of verse or song.

  2. Tragedies focus on the truth of human suffering, failed relationships, and the terrible events surrounding them. There is usually a central hero who is brought down by his or her flaws, things that the viewers should relate to.

  3. ‘The Definition of Love’ portrays love as born from despair and impossibility, forever thwarted by fate, yet eternally profound. Andrew Marvell was an important English poet who is best-known for his satire. Notable works include ' The Unfortunate Lover ' and ' To His Coy Mistress.'

  4. Andrew Marvell's "The Definition of Love" suggests that the greatest love is an impossible one. The poem's speaker and a beloved can't be together, but by going on loving each other in spite of distance and hopelessness, they achieve a love the speaker imagines in terms of mathematical perfection.

  5. According to Aristotle, tragedy “is an imitation of an action that is admirable, complete and possesses magnitude.” Tragedy is written in “language made pleasurable” (meaning language that has rhythm and melody), and it can be separated into parts of verse or song.

  6. 10 sty 2022 · Through offering an analysis of the concept of love in Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet and its connection with the Lacanian notions of desire, subjectivity, fantasy, the Real, and death (drive), this article seeks to delineate Lacan’s contribution to the philosophy of love.

  7. Many of Hardy's tragic narratives focus on love, courtship and marriage. Invariably death is the outcome of relationships which sour or in which there are problems. In the Emma poems, death happens by chance and yet it results in tragic experiences for the grief stricken mourner.

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