The Road from Horton: Looking Backwards in "Lycidas"English Literary Studies, University of Victoria, 1983 - 90 páginas This book argues that it was through his dialogue with the pastoral and elegiac traditions in Lycidas that Milton first came face to face with the frustrations and pressures which were to change the future course of his life. |
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Página 14
Looking Backwards in "Lycidas" John Martin Evans. The reference to competition points towards Theocritus ' seventh Idyl in which a goatherd called Lycidas engages in a singing match with Simi- chidas . The identification of his ...
Looking Backwards in "Lycidas" John Martin Evans. The reference to competition points towards Theocritus ' seventh Idyl in which a goatherd called Lycidas engages in a singing match with Simi- chidas . The identification of his ...
Página 20
... reference , however oblique , to the tri- umphal crowning of a live poet could possibly have been intended at this point of Lycidas , the traditional association of the laurel with Apollo , the myrtle with Venus , and the ivy with ...
... reference , however oblique , to the tri- umphal crowning of a live poet could possibly have been intended at this point of Lycidas , the traditional association of the laurel with Apollo , the myrtle with Venus , and the ivy with ...
Página 86
... reference to the animals which the singer has in his care . Significantly , perhaps , there is no mention of the flock at the end of Lycidas . 20 Columbia , III , i , 242 . 21 I have given my reasons for rejecting this assumption in my ...
... reference to the animals which the singer has in his care . Significantly , perhaps , there is no mention of the flock at the end of Lycidas . 20 Columbia , III , i , 242 . 21 I have given my reasons for rejecting this assumption in my ...
Contenido
CHAPTER | 5 |
CHAPTER FIVE | 36 |
CHAPTER SEVEN | 50 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Ageanax allusion Amaryllis Apollo argue beginning blest Kingdoms meek blind Fury Brinsley Bucolica chaste chastity Christian classical Claudius Aelianus commentators Comus critics Daphnis Daphnis and Gallus dead death echoes Edward King Epitaphium Damonis Eurydice final Friedman G. S. Fraser Greek Heinsius hideous roar homely slighted shepherd's Horton interpretation John Milton King's lament Latin laurel London Lycidas Lycoris M. H. Abrams MARTIN EVANS Mayerson Melanchthon Menalcas ment Milton's Lycidas Moeris Monodies mourn Muse myrtle myth Nativity Ode Neaera NOTES TO CHAPTER nymphs Orpheus ottava rima Paradise Lost passage pastoral elegy Patrem Patrides Peter's Phoebus poem's poet poet's poetry Press Priapus quote Ramus Reason of Church Renaissance Revelation Riccius seems Seriatim Servius sexual shepherd singing song speaker speech suggest thankless theme Theocritus thou tion Tityrus tradition translation uncouth swain Univ Variorum Commentary Venus verse Virgil's Eclogue Virgil's tenth Eclogue Virgilii vision visitors Vives voice writes