For those who haven't read Hilary Mantel's Booker-Prizewinning novel, WOLF HALL, here for your delectation are the quotations that begin the book:
"There are three kinds of scenes, one called the tragic, second the comic, third the satyric. Their decorations are different and unalike each other in scheme. Tragic scenes are delineated with columns, pediments, statues and other objects suited to kings; comic scenes exhibit private dwellings, with balconies and views representing rows of windows, after the manner of ordinary dwellings; satyric scenes are decorated with trees, caverns, mountains and other rustic objects delineated in landscape style." --VITRUVIUS, De Architectura, on the theatre, c. 27BC
"These be the names of the players:
Felicity Cloaked Collusion Liberty Courtly Abusion Measure Folly Magnificence Adversity Fancy Poverty Counterfeit Countenance Despair Crafty Conveyance Mischief Good Hope Redress Circumspection Perseverence Magnificence: an Interlude JOHN SKELTON, c.1520
I read both these quotations and of course couldn't help but think of magnificent interludes in the Barn.
--Mike, your Crafty Conveyance
I ADORED Wolf Hall, Mike!
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On Apr 8, 2010, at 6:43 PM, Mike Godwin mnemonic@gmail.com wrote:
For those who haven't read Hilary Mantel's Booker-Prizewinning novel, WOLF HALL, here for your delectation are the quotations that begin the book:
"There are three kinds of scenes, one called the tragic, second the comic, third the satyric. Their decorations are different and unalike each other in scheme. Tragic scenes are delineated with columns, pediments, statues and other objects suited to kings; comic scenes exhibit private dwellings, with balconies and views representing rows of windows, after the manner of ordinary dwellings; satyric scenes are decorated with trees, caverns, mountains and other rustic objects delineated in landscape style." --VITRUVIUS, De Architectura, on the theatre, c. 27BC
"These be the names of the players:
Felicity Cloaked Collusion Liberty Courtly Abusion Measure Folly Magnificence Adversity Fancy Poverty Counterfeit Countenance Despair Crafty Conveyance Mischief Good Hope Redress Circumspection Perseverence Magnificence: an Interlude JOHN SKELTON, c.1520
I read both these quotations and of course couldn't help but think of magnificent interludes in the Barn.
--Mike, your Crafty Conveyance
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