The Raven and the Lark: Lost Children in Literature of the English RenaissanceBucknell University Press, 1985 - 228 Seiten The lost child plot, which appears in the work of virtually every major author of the English Renaissance, is examined in this study of a wide variety of the literature of that period. |
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Seite 18
... describes . The writer using it could convey both the idealization of the child cir- cumscribed by certain philosophical and artistic dicta and his neglect in response to still other religious and social pressures . Regarding the ...
... describes . The writer using it could convey both the idealization of the child cir- cumscribed by certain philosophical and artistic dicta and his neglect in response to still other religious and social pressures . Regarding the ...
Seite 37
... describes both the painting and its setting as " the most beautiful thing that I have ever seen . " But the picture itself , at least as much as he relates here , describes human desperation , not joy : babies being born , exposed ...
... describes both the painting and its setting as " the most beautiful thing that I have ever seen . " But the picture itself , at least as much as he relates here , describes human desperation , not joy : babies being born , exposed ...
Seite 55
... describes mental change in terms of physical loss . The poets are crazed because they have no bearings , as if they were alone in a disappearing forest without a compass . But they are also plagued with guilt ( haunted by their own ...
... describes mental change in terms of physical loss . The poets are crazed because they have no bearings , as if they were alone in a disappearing forest without a compass . But they are also plagued with guilt ( haunted by their own ...
Inhalt
Acknowledgments | 11 |
Malorys Works | 40 |
Transformation in Sidneys Old Arcadia | 54 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adoptive interlude Adriana Amoret Antony Antony and Cleopatra Artegall Arthur becomes begins believe Britomart Cain Calidore canto characters child Cleopatra Comedy of Errors Cordelia court created cycle death Demeter desire destiny divine dream Duessa earth earthly emerges Faerie Queene father fear Florizel flowers foundling plot foundling stories foundling theme future Genesis gods Hamlet heavenly Hermione heroes initial King King Lear Launcelot Le Morte d'Arthur Lear Leontes live lost lovers Marina marriage Merlin Mordred mother Musidorus myth nature once Ophelia origin Oxford parents past pastoral Paulina Pellinor Perdita Pericles Persephone Philisides play poet Polixenes Princeton Prospero Pyrocles quest Red Cross Knight restoration Richard Richard III Romeo and Juliet Rosalind scene seeks sexual Shakespeare Shakespeare Our Contemporary Sidney's sonnet speech Spenser Strephon and Klaius Tempest thee thou tion transformation University Press unto Venus vision Winter's Tale
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Reading Adoption: Family and Difference in Fiction and Drama Marianne Novy Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2005 |
An Index of Characters in Early Modern English Drama: Printed Plays, 1500-1660 Thomas L. Berger,William C. Bradford,Sidney L. Sondergard Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1998 |