Classical Tragedy

Classical tragedies are the first tragedies to come around as most of these tragedies came from ancient civilizations. Most of these tragedies however came from ancient Greece, and most of them depict epic battles that rage across the land. The writers of the classical tragedy includes Greeks, such as Aeschylus, Euripides and Sophocles; and Roman writers such as Seneca, Lucias, Accius and Pacueius.
The Classical tragedy deals with the fate of characters of high birth and status such as kings, princes and their house chores. Its atmosphere is sombre and serious. It purges the emotions of pity and fear in the minds of the audience by raising these feelings. There is no mingling of the tragic and comic elements in a classical tragedy. It tries to purify the feelings and raises the audience bothering and spiritually. A distinctive feature of the classical tragedy is the use of chorus. It consisted of a group of characters who reported the things happening off the stage. They also made moral comments on the action of the play. The scenes of violence were mostly are reported by the chorus as it was not possible to show them on the primitive stage of those times. 

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