Milton and the Tangles of Neaera's Hair: The Making of the 1645 PoemsUniversity of Missouri Press, 1997 - 299 páginas Milton's 1645 Poems is a double volume, containing not only Milton's major English lyric poems - the Nativity ode, "L'Allegro" and "Il Penseroso," "Lycidas," and the mask Comusbut also his youthful elegiac poetry and his mature Latin poems, which were written in the late 1630s after his major English lyrics had already been composed. In Milton and the Tangles of Neaera's Hair, Stella P. Revard traces the development of the 1645 Poems as a double book and investigates the debt of both English and Latin poetry to the neo-Latin and vernacular traditions of the Continental Renaissance. Too often critics simply ignore the presence of the Latin poems in the 1645 volume. Revard claims that to do so is to miss Milton's implicit intention to balance English and Latin works. She shows that the Latin poems complement the English works and reveal even more than the English poems the personal, political, and cultural crises that Milton was undergoing in the late 1630s, supplementing what the earlier English poems and particularly "Lycidas" tell us about Milton's shift of direction as poet. The Latin poems also announce Milton's intention to write an epic in his native tongue rather than in Latin. Yet even as Milton renounced Latin as the language for poetical expression, he resolved to carry into his English poems the ideals of the Continental humanistic tradition. Milton and the Tangles of Neaera's Hair provides a balanced view of Milton's first book of poetry and also looks at poetry from the Continental Renaissance tradition hitherto neglected. The reader is better able to understand how this tradition shaped both the English and the Latin poetry of Milton's 1645 Poems, as well as how Milton became the poet who went on to write the greatest epic in the English language, Paradise Lost. |
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Página 139
... refer to a kind of venereal glue ( the " glutin of Dione " ) that holds fixed those warming to desire : " Tunc glutino Diones / Simul haesimus calentes . " 20 Leech is probably speaking metaphorically when he refers to the glue of Dione ...
... refer to a kind of venereal glue ( the " glutin of Dione " ) that holds fixed those warming to desire : " Tunc glutino Diones / Simul haesimus calentes . " 20 Leech is probably speaking metaphorically when he refers to the glue of Dione ...
Página 203
... refers to Phoebus's grief for Hyacinthus , to the impotence of the Muse , to the necessity to confer due rites on King as an alumnus of Cambridge . John Pullen refers to Deva and to Sabrina . R. Brown refers in his Latin poem to ...
... refers to Phoebus's grief for Hyacinthus , to the impotence of the Muse , to the necessity to confer due rites on King as an alumnus of Cambridge . John Pullen refers to Deva and to Sabrina . R. Brown refers in his Latin poem to ...
Página 213
... refers to the Aonian shores the mountain on which Hesiod , the archetypal shepherd - poet of the Greek , met the Muses and where they conferred on him the laurel branch , the emblem of his profession as poet . 16 Thus , Milton implies ...
... refers to the Aonian shores the mountain on which Hesiod , the archetypal shepherd - poet of the Greek , met the Muses and where they conferred on him the laurel branch , the emblem of his profession as poet . 16 Thus , Milton implies ...
Contenido
THE COMING OF SPRING | 8 |
THE WINTER ELEGIES | 44 |
APOLLO AND THE ROUT | 64 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
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