Essential Articles for the Study of Edmund SpenserAlbert Charles Hamilton Archon Books, 1972 - 656 páginas |
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Página 113
Albert Charles Hamilton. THE BOWER OF BLISS AND ARMIDA'S PALACE Robert M. Durling Since Koeppel in 1889 called attention to the fact that the Bower of Bliss ( The Faerie Queene , II , xii ) owes much to Armida's palace ( Gerusalemme ...
Albert Charles Hamilton. THE BOWER OF BLISS AND ARMIDA'S PALACE Robert M. Durling Since Koeppel in 1889 called attention to the fact that the Bower of Bliss ( The Faerie Queene , II , xii ) owes much to Armida's palace ( Gerusalemme ...
Página 114
... Bower so easy of entrance , Spenser may have expected his readers to remember that " wide is the gate , and broad is the way , that leadeth to de- struction . " Tasso's fountain with its sirens has been placed in- side the Bower itself ...
... Bower so easy of entrance , Spenser may have expected his readers to remember that " wide is the gate , and broad is the way , that leadeth to de- struction . " Tasso's fountain with its sirens has been placed in- side the Bower itself ...
Página 121
Albert Charles Hamilton. Let us examine further the activity of the mind in the Bower of Bliss . We have already seen its corruption in Cymochles and the beasts ; we shall examine it as it creates the Bower itself . Both Tasso and ...
Albert Charles Hamilton. Let us examine further the activity of the mind in the Bower of Bliss . We have already seen its corruption in Cymochles and the beasts ; we shall examine it as it creates the Bower itself . Both Tasso and ...
Termos e frases comuns
action actual Adonis allegory Amoret appears Artegall Arthur aspect Beast beauty become beginning body Book Bower bring Britomart Calidore called canto characters chastity Christian Church comes complex course court courtesy critics death described doth earth effect elements Elizabethan episode example experience fact Faerie Queene fall false fear feeling figure final force Garden gives grace Guyon hand hero human ideal important interpretation justice kind Knight lady language light meaning mind moral nature never once original passage perfect perhaps pleasure poem poet present pride proem reader reason Red Cross reference relation represents seems sense significance Spenser spiritual stanza story structure suggests symbolic temperance things tion traditional true turn Venus virtue vision whole