The Raven and the Lark: Lost Children in Literature of the English RenaissanceBucknell University Press, 1985 - 228 páginas 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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... birth- mark , and finally reunited ( usually at the moment he is about to marry ) with his biological parents . His recovery and marriage restore the royal dynasty . All lost child plots present two philosophi- cally opposed goods : the ...
... birth- mark , and finally reunited ( usually at the moment he is about to marry ) with his biological parents . His recovery and marriage restore the royal dynasty . All lost child plots present two philosophi- cally opposed goods : the ...
Página 18
... birth might cause a similar conflagration . But having arrived , the child's infant progress was deemed of too little interest or importance to his family to merit record.2 Children were to be heard ( and seen ) principally at moments ...
... birth might cause a similar conflagration . But having arrived , the child's infant progress was deemed of too little interest or importance to his family to merit record.2 Children were to be heard ( and seen ) principally at moments ...
Página 23
... birth of the manifold and endless temptations of the Devil . " When Jane's parents despair that her acts were not in " measure and number ... so perfect . . . as God made the world , " they betray a fear that , as their double , she ...
... birth of the manifold and endless temptations of the Devil . " When Jane's parents despair that her acts were not in " measure and number ... so perfect . . . as God made the world , " they betray a fear that , as their double , she ...
Página 24
... birth , freeing everyone from a puritanically rigid determinism . Poor relief proposes that , through art , the defects of nature can be overcome ; envi- ronment displaces heredity : Truly it is a greater thing and a better to be well ...
... birth , freeing everyone from a puritanically rigid determinism . Poor relief proposes that , through art , the defects of nature can be overcome ; envi- ronment displaces heredity : Truly it is a greater thing and a better to be well ...
Página 32
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Conteúdo
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18 | |
Finders Keepers Preservation and the Legendary Foundling | 27 |
Finding and Losing Beaulté and Noblesse Adoption in Malorys Works | 40 |
Transformation in Sidneys Old Arcadia | 54 |
Spenserian Hesitation | 68 |
Two Irreconcilable Foundlings The Love Story and the Saint Story in Book 1 of The Faerie Queene | 70 |
Two Creations Succession and Generation in Books 3 through 5 of The Faerie Queene | 84 |
Earned Reprieve in The Comedy of Errors and Pericles | 133 |
The Dream of a Better Life in As You Like It and Antony and Cleopatra | 143 |
A Manly Loss | 158 |
Hamlets Story or The Childs Refusal to Man the Father | 159 |
A World Within Found Enclosure and Final Exposure in King Lear | 170 |
Becoming the Story in The Winters Tale | 178 |
Telling the Story in The Tempest | 192 |
The Findings of Loss | 202 |
Two Recreations Pastorellas Return and the Poets Emergence in Book 6 of The Faerie Queene | 96 |
Shakespearean Explorations | 107 |
Richard III and Genesis 4 | 108 |
Romeo Juliet and the Art of Naming Love | 117 |
A Womanly Discovery | 131 |
Notes | 204 |
Bibliography | 218 |
226 | |
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Termos e frases comuns
adoptive interlude Adriana Amoret Antony Antony and Cleopatra Artegall Arthur becomes begins believe Britomart Cain Calidore canto characters Cleopatra Comedy of Errors Cordelia cycle death Demeter desire destiny dream Duessa dynasty earth earthly edited emerges Faerie Queene father fear Florizel flowers foundling plots foundling stories foundling theme future Genesis gods Hamlet Hermione heroes initial King King Lear Launcelot Le Morte d'Arthur Lear Leontes London lost child lovers Marina marriage Merlin Mordred mother Musidorus myth nature Old Arcadia once Ophelia origin Oxford parents past pastoral Pastorella Paulina Pellinor Perdita Pericles Persephone Philisides play poet Polixenes Princeton promise 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
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Página 22 - I am in presence either of father or mother, whether I speak, keep silence, sit, stand, or go, eat, drink, be merry or sad, be sewing, playing, dancing, or doing anything else, I must do it, as it were, in such weight, measure, and number, even so perfectly as God made the world...