Milton's Lycidas: The Tradition and the PoemC. A. Patrides University of Missouri Press, 1983 - 370 páginas |
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Página 146
... mourning . And , with regard solely to Lycidas himself , one might take the statement that the trees " Shall now no ... mourn . " The dancing satyrs and fauns of the preceding stanza are not represented here as weeping ; neither they ...
... mourning . And , with regard solely to Lycidas himself , one might take the statement that the trees " Shall now no ... mourn . " The dancing satyrs and fauns of the preceding stanza are not represented here as weeping ; neither they ...
Página 200
... mourn . ' Why do the woods mourn for human deaths in pastoral poems ? the vines lament in their untended wildness ? Several accustomed meanings of such images provide for Milton the very conceptions of the universal order without which ...
... mourn . ' Why do the woods mourn for human deaths in pastoral poems ? the vines lament in their untended wildness ? Several accustomed meanings of such images provide for Milton the very conceptions of the universal order without which ...
Página 223
... mourns his death : Thee Shepherd , thee the Woods , and desert Caves , With wilde Thyme and the gadding Vine o'regrown , And all their echoes mourn . We go on to the fifth type of Lycidas , the archetypal version , which entered the ...
... mourns his death : Thee Shepherd , thee the Woods , and desert Caves , With wilde Thyme and the gadding Vine o'regrown , And all their echoes mourn . We go on to the fifth type of Lycidas , the archetypal version , which entered the ...
Contenido
Epitaphium Damonis | 14 |
On the Tradition | 31 |
14 | 42 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Adonis allegorical allusion Alpheus Apollo archetypal Arethuse begins called canzone Christ Christian classical consolation critical dead death digression dread voice E. M. W. Tillyard echoes eclogues Edward King elegiac English essay experience F. T. Prince false surmise fame fiction figure final flower passage grief heaven human imagery images Italian John Milton lament language lines literary literature Lycidas Lycidas's lyric M. H. Abrams meaning melodious tear ment metaphor Milton's Lycidas mind monody mourn movement Muse myth nature nymphs once Orpheus ottava rima pagan Paradise Lost pastoral convention pastoral elegy pattern person voice Peter Phoebus poem poem's poet poet's poetic poetry present question reader reference rhyme sense Shepheardes Calender shepherd sing singer song speaker speaks speech Spenser stanza stream structure suggest symbol thee theme Theocritus things thought tion toral tradition truth two-handed engine uncouth swain verse Virgil vision weep writing