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Jean Racine

Read through the most famous quotes from Jean Racine




Life is a comedy to those who think, a tragedy to those who feel.


— Jean Racine


#emotions #feeling #life #thinking #tragedy

A tragedy need not have blood and death; it's enough that it all be filled with that majestic sadness that is the pleasure of tragedy.


— Jean Racine


#death #enough #filled #majestic #need

I have loved him too much not to hate


— Jean Racine


#love #passion #love

Présente je vous fuis; absente, je vous trouve; Dans le fond des forêts votre image me suit


— Jean Racine


#love #romance #love

J'aime en lui sa beauté, sa grâce tant vantée, Présents dont la nature a voulu l'honorer, Qu'il méprise lui-même, et qu'il semble ignorer.


— Jean Racine


#beauty

Que ne peut l’amitié conduite par l’amour?


— Jean Racine


#love #friendship

According as the man is, so must you humour him.


— Jean Racine


#him #humour #man #must #you

Love is not a fire to be shut up in a soul. Everything betrays us: voice, silence, eyes; half-covered fires burn all the brighter.


— Jean Racine


#brighter #burn #everything #eyes #fire

I embrace my rival, but only to strangle him.


— Jean Racine


#him #i #only #rival #strangle

Hell, covering all with its gloomy vapors, has cast shadows on even the holiest eyes.


— Jean Racine


#covering #even #eyes #gloomy #hell






About Jean Racine

Jean Racine Quotes




Did you know about Jean Racine?

Thus in Racine the hamartia which the thirteenth chapter of Aristotle’s Poetics had declared a characteristic of tragedy is not merely an action performed in all good faith which subsequently has the direst consequences (Œdipus's killing a stranger on the road to Thebes and marrying the widowed Queen of Thebes after solving the Sphinx's riddle) nor is it simply an error of judgment (as when Deianira in the Hercules Furens of Seneca the Younger kills her husband when intending to win back his love); it is a flaw of character. 1441-1448; Phèdre ll. But despite her extraordinary lucidity (II 1; V 1) in analysing her violently fluctuating states of mind Jean Racine is blind to the fact that the King does not really love her (III 3) and this weakness on her part which leads directly to the tragic peripeteia of III 7 is the hamartia from which the tragic outcome arises.

Racine's dramaturgy is marked by his psychological insight the prevailing passion of his characters and the nakedness of both the plot and stage. The linguistic effects of Racine's poetry are widely considered to be untranslatable although many eminent poets have attempted to do so including Lowell Ted Hughes and Derek Mahon into English and Schiller into German.

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