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{{Mergeto|Heroic drama|date=October 2007}}
] was a form mainly specific to the ], through instances continued to be written in the earlier eighteenth century. As ] defined it: "An heroic play ought to be an imitation, in little, of an heroic poem; and consequently...love and valour ought to be the subject of it" (Preface to ''The Conquest of Grenada'' 1672). By 'heroic poem' he meant epic, and the plays attempted to emulate the epic by including a large-scale warrior as hero, an action involving the fate of an empire, and an elevated and elaborate style, usually cast in the epigrammatic form of the closed heroic couplet. A noble hero and heroine are typically represented in a situation in which their passionate love conflicts with the demands of honour and the hero's patriotic duty to his country; if the conflict ends in disaster, the play is called a heroic tragedy. Often the central dilemma is patently contrived and the characters and statuesque and unconvincing, while the attempt to sustain a high epic style swells sometimes into bombast, as in Dryden's ''Love Triumphant'' (1693): 'What woods are these? I feel my vital heat/Forsake my limbs, my curdled blood retreat.'

Dryden's ''Conquest of Granada'' is one of the better heroic tragedies, but his highest achievement is his adaptation (which he called ''All for Love'', 1678) of Shakespeare's ''Anthony and Cleopatra'' to the heroic formula. Other heroic dramatists were Nathaniel Lee (''The Rival Queens'') and Thomas Otway, whose ''Venice Preserved'' is a fine tragedy that transcends the usual limitations of the form. We also owe indirectly to heroic tragedy two very amusing parodies of the type: the Ducke of Buckingham's ''The Rehearsal'' and Henry Fielding's ''The Tragedy of Tragedies, or the Life and Death of Tom Thumb the Great''

A Glossary of Literary Terms - M. H. Abrams

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Latest revision as of 01:48, 13 February 2009

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