The Allegorical Temper: Vision and Reality in Book II of Spenser's Faerie QueeneYale University Press, 1957 - 248 páginas |
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Página 53
... passage is that of the single en- counter ; in the second passage the war is envisioned as a siege against a community . The respective contexts of these stanzas further qualify their meanings . In the first , Guyon has just overcome ...
... passage is that of the single en- counter ; in the second passage the war is envisioned as a siege against a community . The respective contexts of these stanzas further qualify their meanings . In the first , Guyon has just overcome ...
Página 136
... passage to see if its poetic action can in any way illuminate or resolve the narrative amplified from the four - line Argument . The passage is placed and announced in such a way that it appears as a climax to the preceding action ; the ...
... passage to see if its poetic action can in any way illuminate or resolve the narrative amplified from the four - line Argument . The passage is placed and announced in such a way that it appears as a climax to the preceding action ; the ...
Página 157
... passage . It is the very digressive- ness of the passage that increases our sense of her reality ; what makes us immediately conscious of the irrelevance is its length . We may note in this connection not only the flatness but the ...
... passage . It is the very digressive- ness of the passage that increases our sense of her reality ; what makes us immediately conscious of the irrelevance is its length . We may note in this connection not only the flatness but the ...
Conteúdo
A Critical Misadventure | 3 |
133 | 150 |
The Demonic Allegorist | 211 |
Direitos autorais | |
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Termos e frases comuns
Acrasia allegory Alma's castle Amavia anagoge Archimago Aristotle Arthur attitude Belphoebe Belphoebe's Book Bower Braggadochio C. S. Lewis Canto vii character Christian chronicle classical comparison concept consciousness context critics Cymochles Diana divine doth dramatic earthly Edmund Spenser Elizabeth epic simile episode ethical Everyman evil excellence existence F. M. Cornford fable fact Faerie Queene faint faire fiction Furor Gloriana God's goodly grace Guyon hero hero's honor human idea ideal kind knight krasis literary lust Maleger Mammon Mammon's Cave man's meaning Medina merely metaphor mind moral narrator nature Palmer passage passions Penthesilea Phaedria Phantastes poem poem's poet poet's poetic action poetic allegory poetry problem Pyrochles quest reader reality Redcross seems selfe sense shame Shamefastnesse simile six cantos sophrosyne soul Spenser spirit stanzas suggests symbolic T. S. Eliot temperance theological things tion University Press virtue W. K. Wimsatt Watkins weakness words York