Mythology and the Renaissance Tradition in English Poetry |
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
THE BACKGROUND OF CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN THE SIXTEENTH | 25 |
WILLIAM BROWNE 156 | 156 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Aeneas Aeneid allegory amorous Anchises ancient appears beauty borrowed burlesque canto Chapman chapter Chaucer classic myth Comus conception conventional Cupid Diana didactic Dido divine Drayton echoes edition Elizabethan Endimion English epic epistle Faerie Queene Fletcher Glaucus goddess gods Greek Grosart Hero and Leander heroic Heywood Homer imitation influence Italian John Milton Latin less lines literature London loue lovers Lucrece Marlowe Marlowe's medieval Metam Metamorphoses Milton modern moral Musaeus mythological allusions mythological poem Narcissus narrative Natalis Comes nymphs Orpheus Ovid Ovid's Ovidian pagan Paradise Paris passage passion pastoral phrase piece Platonic poet poetic poetry popular prose Pyramus Pyramus and Thisbe quoted Renaissance rhetoric romantic Salmacis Sandys satire says Scilla sensuous seventeenth century Shakespeare sixteenth Song Sonnets soul Spenser stanzas story style suggests tale Text theme Thisbe Thomas Thomas Heywood tradition translation travesty Trojan Troy Venus and Adonis verse Virgil writing