The Mutabilitie Cantos, Libro 7Nelson, 1968 - 160 páginas These cantos, published posthumously, are general agreed to contain some of the finest poetry in "The Faerie Queene", and are of central importance in the study of philosophic and religious beliefs in the late sixteenth century. |
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Página 25
... earthly and spiritual love that suffuses Chaucer's poem . These are not easily reconciled , as many episodes else- where in The Faerie Queene demonstrate . Earthly love may promote the plenitude by which imperfect , finite life gropes ...
... earthly and spiritual love that suffuses Chaucer's poem . These are not easily reconciled , as many episodes else- where in The Faerie Queene demonstrate . Earthly love may promote the plenitude by which imperfect , finite life gropes ...
Página 42
... earthly struggles . The struggle of the finite toward the good takes up much of the poem ; the prayer for contemplative existence becomes appropriate only to the end of earthly life . These shifts in emphasis are not a sign of a failure ...
... earthly struggles . The struggle of the finite toward the good takes up much of the poem ; the prayer for contemplative existence becomes appropriate only to the end of earthly life . These shifts in emphasis are not a sign of a failure ...
Página 43
... earthly scene becomes precious , the ' Sabaoth's sight ' both more precise and poignant , by reason of the continual presence of each in the other . The language of the concluding prayer recalls the writings of Augustine . In the ...
... earthly scene becomes precious , the ' Sabaoth's sight ' both more precise and poignant , by reason of the continual presence of each in the other . The language of the concluding prayer recalls the writings of Augustine . In the ...
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Términos y frases comunes
according Actaeon allegory alliteration allusion alteration appeare appropriate archaic archaism associated attempt Book Cantos cause Chaucer's Christian circle classical Comes common commonplace concluding continually course creatures Cynthia death delight detail Diana divine doth earlier earth earthly Elizabethan employed English epic equall especially example Faerie Queene faire Fall Fate Faunus figure finds goddess gods hand haue heaven human idea Ioue Jove Jove's language less literary materials meaning medieval mind months moon Mutabilitie mutability myth narrative Nature Nature's observes Ovid Parlement perhaps poem poetry poets political possible prayer present probably Providence reference Renaissance rest rhetoric rule Seasons seems sense sources Spenser stanza story Studies suggests symbol theme things thinks thou thought Titan tradition turning whole