Spenser, Milton, and Renaissance PastoralExamination of Spenser's and Milton's use of the pastoral as a vehicle for the imagination's dramatization of itself. |
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Página 140
The effect of such role - assigning draws attention not to the verse of the elegist , or to poetry in general , or to the ritual it may enact , but to the deeds , exploits , and valor of the dead hero himself . No substantial claim is ...
The effect of such role - assigning draws attention not to the verse of the elegist , or to poetry in general , or to the ritual it may enact , but to the deeds , exploits , and valor of the dead hero himself . No substantial claim is ...
Página 161
Perhaps Spenser himself had difficulty in deciding how to define courtesy , or how to present his hero , or even how to end the book . The very insecurities that every reader feels when confronted by the uncomfortable and untidy ...
Perhaps Spenser himself had difficulty in deciding how to define courtesy , or how to present his hero , or even how to end the book . The very insecurities that every reader feels when confronted by the uncomfortable and untidy ...
Página 177
conveyed the impression that I am in fact arguing for the poet and not Calidore as the hero of book 6. That is not my intention . I do maintain , however , that the unusual identification that critics have increasingly recognized ...
conveyed the impression that I am in fact arguing for the poet and not Calidore as the hero of book 6. That is not my intention . I do maintain , however , that the unusual identification that critics have increasingly recognized ...
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Contenido
Acknowledgments | 9 |
Spenser Milton and the Pastoral Tradition | 19 |
The Shepheardes Calender and Colin Clouts | 45 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
achieve adonean allows attempt beauty begins Calender Calidore Calidore's Colin Clout conclusion continues conventions course courtesy critical dead death divine earlier early Eclogue effect elegist English example experience expression eyes fact fallen figure final flower follow forces Graces grief hand harmony heaven heavenly hero human hymn imagination important John lament landscape later lead light lines literary lives lover Lycidas means mind mode moral movement Muse narrative nature never notes observations once opening Orpheus orphic pastoral elegy pattern Penseroso perhaps poem poem's poet poet's poetic poetry praise present proem provides Queene reader Renaissance response ritual role seems sense share shepherd similar skill song speaker Spenser and Milton spirit stanza suggests takes tion tradition understanding University Press verse Virgil's virtue vision voice youth
Referencias a este libro
The Pipes of Pan: Intertextuality and Literary Filiation in the Pastoral ... Thomas K. Hubbard Vista previa limitada - 1998 |
Sidney's Poetic Justice: The Old Arcadia, Its Eclogues, and Renaissance ... Robert E. Stillman,Robert Stillman, M.D. Vista previa limitada - 1986 |