Time, Landscape and the Ideal Life: Studies in the Pastoral Poetry of Spenser and MiltonAppollon-sha, 1974 - 272 Seiten |
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Seite 113
... seen , connect Colin Clout with the various aspects of the Calender are contained in the story told by the single narrator , Colin Clout . It means that the world of Colin Clout in this poem has absorbed the different worlds of the ...
... seen , connect Colin Clout with the various aspects of the Calender are contained in the story told by the single narrator , Colin Clout . It means that the world of Colin Clout in this poem has absorbed the different worlds of the ...
Seite 159
... seen the Beast . They answer that they have never seen such a monster . Finding Calidore all in a sweat , they invite the knight to rest with them and offer him food and drink . While taking a rest , Calidore is fascinated by the charm ...
... seen the Beast . They answer that they have never seen such a monster . Finding Calidore all in a sweat , they invite the knight to rest with them and offer him food and drink . While taking a rest , Calidore is fascinated by the charm ...
Seite 203
... seen the fate of his faithful child , Lycidas . We have seen that Douglas Bush has said of this passage that it shows " the littleness of man in a world of forces that God does not seem to control . " Actually we now realize that there ...
... seen the fate of his faithful child , Lycidas . We have seen that Douglas Bush has said of this passage that it shows " the littleness of man in a world of forces that God does not seem to control . " Actually we now realize that there ...
Inhalt
CALENDER | 1 |
HIERARCHY AND CYCLIC TIME IN THE MORAL | 32 |
COLIN CLOUTS MEDITATION UPON INNER | 66 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Albrecht Dürer allegorical Astrophel beauty Bregog Calidore Calidore's classical Clouts Come Home Colin Clout Comus contemplation courtesy criticism Cuddie death describes dolphins doth E. M. W. Tillyard Edmund Spenser Elizabethan English Essays Faerie Queene flock flowers four humours Graces happy hath haue heauen hikari to yami Hobbinol human humour Ibid idea ideal interpretation Iulye Iune Januarye John Milton knight lady landscape lines literary Literature London loue Lycidas meaning Mirror for Magistrates moral eclogues mought Mythology nature Numbers otium Panofsky passage Pastoral Elegy pastoral poetry pastoral world Pastorella Perigot plaintive eclogues poet poetic Poetry of Edmund praise proverbs reader recreative eclogues Renaissance Renaissance no hikari Renaissance pastoral represents romantic Rosalind says scene shade Shepheardes Calender shepherd similar Sixth Book song Spenserian stanza story symbol theme Thenot Theocritus Thomalin Thomas Warton thou umbra Virgil's Virgilian vision vnto Warton winter words York