Spenser, Milton, and Renaissance PastoralExamination of Spenser's and Milton's use of the pastoral as a vehicle for the imagination's dramatization of itself. |
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Page 145
... conclusion , " Woodhouse asserts , " that the pictures on the cups have been leading us unawares . " Woodhouse's observations are undeniably valid . Milton has gone to great lengths to ensure a triumphant conclusion that is symbolically ...
... conclusion , " Woodhouse asserts , " that the pictures on the cups have been leading us unawares . " Woodhouse's observations are undeniably valid . Milton has gone to great lengths to ensure a triumphant conclusion that is symbolically ...
Page 161
... conclusion to the human drama . And yet heroes and poets must and will continue to quest . Spenser's conclusion , if we can call the end of this book a conclusion , Poet and Hero in Book 6 of The Faerie Queene 161.
... conclusion to the human drama . And yet heroes and poets must and will continue to quest . Spenser's conclusion , if we can call the end of this book a conclusion , Poet and Hero in Book 6 of The Faerie Queene 161.
Page 163
... conclusion , though hardly the only instance , comes to mind most readily . Perhaps an eagerness to look for a future with Providence as our guide would allow us to sweeten the bitterness of the conclusion or to ignore Calidore's ...
... conclusion , though hardly the only instance , comes to mind most readily . Perhaps an eagerness to look for a future with Providence as our guide would allow us to sweeten the bitterness of the conclusion or to ignore Calidore's ...
Contents
Acknowledgments 939 | 7 |
Spenser Milton and the Pastoral Tradition | 19 |
The Shepheardes Calender and Colin Clouts | 45 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
achieve Acidale adonean elegy Adonis Astrophel beauty Bion Calidore Calidore's Colin Clout conclusion conventions courtesy courtly critical Daphnis Daphnis's dead death Dido divine earlier Eclogue Edmund Spenser elegist Eliza emblem embody emotional epic Epitaphium example Faerie Queene fallen final flower Gallus Genius genre Graces grief harmony Harvard University Press heaven heavenly hero human hymn Il Penseroso imagination Januarye John Milton L'Allegro lament landscape light literary London loue lover Lycidas Lycidas's means metaphor Milton's pastorals mode Mopsus moral Muse narrative nature neoplatonic Orpheus orphic orphic elegy pagan Paradise pastoral elegy pastoral poems pastoral world Pastorella pathetic fallacy pattern Penseroso pensive perspective PMLA poem's poet poet's poetry praise present Princeton proem provides reader Renaissance ritual role Rosalind sense Shepheardes Calender shepherd sing song speaker Spenser and Milton Spenserian spirit stanza suggests Theocritus Thyrsis's tion tradition verse Virgil's virtue vision voice youth