The Classical Tradition: Greek and Roman Influences on Western LiteratureOxford University Press, 1949 - 763 Seiten |
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Seite 110
... became Aprille , ' with his shoures sote ' . Spenser called Chaucer a ' well of English undefiled ' . This is nearly as false as Milton's description of Shakespeare : ' warbling native wood - notes wild ' . There were many medieval ...
... became Aprille , ' with his shoures sote ' . Spenser called Chaucer a ' well of English undefiled ' . This is nearly as false as Milton's description of Shakespeare : ' warbling native wood - notes wild ' . There were many medieval ...
Seite 111
... became ever stronger as western Europe moved into the full Renaissance . Learning became more widely distributed , geo- graphically and socially . More difficult , more adult books were more carefully studied . The sense of language became ...
... became ever stronger as western Europe moved into the full Renaissance . Learning became more widely distributed , geo- graphically and socially . More difficult , more adult books were more carefully studied . The sense of language became ...
Seite 250
... became very free in form . Its rhythm was stronger , but more varied . It was still a dance , but the dancers , instead of repeating one triple figure , or one complex inwoven movement , moved through a series of patterns governed only ...
... became very free in form . Its rhythm was stronger , but more varied . It was still a dance , but the dancers , instead of repeating one triple figure , or one complex inwoven movement , moved through a series of patterns governed only ...
Inhalt
ITALY | 5 |
Christianity enriched by GrecoRoman folklore | 9 |
physical | 11 |
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adapted admired Aeneas Aeneid ancient appears authors baroque beautiful Beowulf Boccaccio Boethius Boileau Cædmon called century characters Chaucer Christian church Cicero cited civilization classical influence Comedy contemporary culture Dante Dante's Dark Ages death drama emotion English epic essay famous France French German Goethe greatest Greco-Roman Greece Greek and Latin Greek and Roman hero heroic Homer Horace Horace's ideals Iliad imagination imitation important inspired instance Italian Italy Jean de Meun Juvenal knew language Latin legend less literature lyric medieval metre Middle Ages Milton modelled modern Montaigne moral myth odes Odyssey original Ovid Ovid's pagan pastoral pattern Petrarch philosophical Pindar Plautus plays Plutarch poem poetic poetry poets produced prose quoted Rabelais Renaissance Roman empire Rome Ronsard satire says scholars Seneca Shakespeare songs spirit stanza story style symbol thought tion tradition tragedy translation Trojan Troy Vergil verse words writing written wrote