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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: EMS-EUD |
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EPILOGUE . The appendix or supplement to a literary work
work
audience
hope
formula
Revels
" Gentles, be't known to you, since I went in I am turned rhymer, and do thus begin:The author (jealous how your sense cloth take His travails) hath enjoined me to make Some short and ceremonious epilogue," and then explained to the audience
" The seasoning of a play is the applause. Now, as the Fox be punished by the laws
He yet doth hope
For any fact which he hath done 'gainst you. If there be, censure him; here he doubtful stands: If not, fare jovially and clap your hands." Beaumont and Fletcher used the epilogue sparingly, but after their day it came more and more into vogue, and the form was almost invariably that which Ben Jonson had brought into fashion, namely, the short complete piece in heroic couplets. The hey-day of the epilogue, however, was the Restoration, and from 166o to the decline of the drama in the reign of Queen Anne scarcely a play, serious or comic, was produced on the London stage without a prologue and an epilogue. These were almost always in verse, even if the play itself was in the roughest prose
supply one for a fee. It gives us an idea of the seriousness with which the epilogue was treated that Dryden originally published his valuable " Defence of the Epilogue; or An Essay on the Dramatic Poetry of the Last Age " (1672) as a defence of the epilogue which he had written for The Conquest of Granada. In France the custom of reciting dramatic epilogues has never prevailed. French criticism gives the name to such adieux to the public, at the close of a non-dramatic work, as are reserved by La Fontaine for certain critical points in the "Fables." (E. G.)End of Article: EPILOGUE If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/EMS_EUD/EPILOGUE.html"> EPILOGUE </a> |
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