The Pillars of Eternity: Time and Providence in The Faerie QueeneIrish Academic Press, 1989 - 256 Seiten The purpose of this new study is to examine the themes of time and providence as they affect the romance narrative of The Faerie Queene. From the point of view of the individual, time is destructive or benign as it affects his own interests or those of his immediate party. but as the outlook widens to that of the race the concept of perpetuity puts such judgments in a new perspective. The relationship between time and providence is one of the central issues in Western philosophy, and Spenser's exploration of the creative and destructive aspects of time from the point of view of |both the individual and the race is seen against the background of ideas available to him. But The Faerie Queene is not a discursive philosophical or theological treatise, and the intention here is not to impose a single intellectual interpretation on the intricacies of the storyline of the poem, but to examine and appreciate the various ways in which Spenser responded aesthetically to his central theme. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 26
Seite 26
... References to time are commonly qualified by adjectives of mood . Yet even when the mood is the product of illusion ... reference to motion through space . This would appear to have been Spenser's view also since he refers in An Hymne ...
... References to time are commonly qualified by adjectives of mood . Yet even when the mood is the product of illusion ... reference to motion through space . This would appear to have been Spenser's view also since he refers in An Hymne ...
Seite 43
... reference occurs in the course of a discussion upon the alleged colonization of Ireland by the mythical Spanish hero Gathelus or Gaedhal . This , Spenser argues , is merely the Irish equivalent of the " Tale of Brutus ' put abroad by ...
... reference occurs in the course of a discussion upon the alleged colonization of Ireland by the mythical Spanish hero Gathelus or Gaedhal . This , Spenser argues , is merely the Irish equivalent of the " Tale of Brutus ' put abroad by ...
Seite 97
... reference to the work is made within The Faerie Queene itself . Spenser makes a point of telling us that Guyon took his knighthood ' of good Sir Huons hand , / When with king Oberon he came to Faerie land ' ( II . 1. 6 ) . The fairy ...
... reference to the work is made within The Faerie Queene itself . Spenser makes a point of telling us that Guyon took his knighthood ' of good Sir Huons hand , / When with king Oberon he came to Faerie land ' ( II . 1. 6 ) . The fairy ...
Inhalt
PREFACE | 11 |
Wicked Time | 55 |
Iust Time | 80 |
Urheberrecht | |
6 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
According action allegory appears argues Arthur asserts associated become begins bodies Britomart Briton canto characters Christian chronicles classical concept concerning contemplation continue course creation death designed despite divine edited effect Elizabeth Elizabethan emerges eternity example existence experience Faerie Queene fairy fall fate final forces fortune future Gardens George grace Guyon House human idea identified individual interpretation John justice King knights less light lives London matter meaning merely mind moral motion Mutability narrative nature origin past pattern perfect perpetual poem poet political present problem proem providence providential quest race reader reason reference reflects regarded remains Renaissance represents result romance seems sense significance soul Spenser spiritual Studies succession suggests temporal theory things thought translated true Tudor turns ultimate universe vision vols York