Apparent Narrative as Thematic Metaphor: The Organization of the Faerie QueeneClarendon Press, 1983 - 232 Seiten |
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Seite 34
... interpreted , of course . But you cannot inter- pret Gloriana without interpreting Arthur as well ; unless you suppose that Arthur himself regards his geographical search as a purely symbolic expression of his spiritual longings- an ...
... interpreted , of course . But you cannot inter- pret Gloriana without interpreting Arthur as well ; unless you suppose that Arthur himself regards his geographical search as a purely symbolic expression of his spiritual longings- an ...
Seite 85
... interpretation of Amoret's plight at the House of Busirane as an allegory of the condition in which she finds herself on her wedding day . For Spenser's reference to her marriage comes in Book IV , which did not appear until six years ...
... interpretation of Amoret's plight at the House of Busirane as an allegory of the condition in which she finds herself on her wedding day . For Spenser's reference to her marriage comes in Book IV , which did not appear until six years ...
Seite 89
... interpretation of the Busirane Cantos tallies with the correct reading of the lines quoted . He regards the House of Busirane as ' the objectification of Amoret's fears of marriage ' , which ' are based on moral and physical grounds ...
... interpretation of the Busirane Cantos tallies with the correct reading of the lines quoted . He regards the House of Busirane as ' the objectification of Amoret's fears of marriage ' , which ' are based on moral and physical grounds ...
Inhalt
One GROUNDWORK | 1 |
Two SCUDAMOUR AND AMORET | 72 |
Three BRITOMART AND ARTEGALL | 131 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Achilles Acrasia adventures Aeneas Aeneid allegory Alpers appears Ariosto Aristotle armour Art(h)egall Artegall Artegall's Arthegality Arthur aspect Belphoebe Bradamante Brito Britomart Busirane episode Busirane's C. S. Lewis Canto characters chastity Christ Cleopolis conception contrary critics Cupid Dido edited Edmund Spenser epic Eternity Faerie Queene Faery Court Faeryland feast fiction flashback Florimell friendship Gavin Douglas Glauce Glauce's Gloriana glory God's Guyon heavenly Hence implies infer justice knights lady Legend Letter literal London lover magnificence manifestly marriage Mask means Merlin metaphor Middle Books mirror moral narrative natural Neoplatonic Orlando Furioso Outer Books pageants perfection personifications poem poem's poet poet's Poetry prophecy quest hero Radigund readers reading Red Cross repr reveal Roche romance Satyrane's scene Scudamour and Amoret seems sense sexual stanzas story suggests symbolizes Telamond temperance Temple of Venus thing tion titular heroes tournament unfolds virtue wedding whole