Time, Landscape and the Ideal Life: Studies in the Pastoral Poetry of Spenser and Milton |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 26
Page 59
... doth hast . ( 11. 3-6 ) He says that not only his own personal fortune , but the world itself is getting worse : " They sayne the world is much war then it wont " ( 1. 108 ) . Hobbinol's fortune is also declining . And yet he hopefully ...
... doth hast . ( 11. 3-6 ) He says that not only his own personal fortune , but the world itself is getting worse : " They sayne the world is much war then it wont " ( 1. 108 ) . Hobbinol's fortune is also declining . And yet he hopefully ...
Page 132
... doth appeare . For how should else things so far from attone And so great enemies as of them bee , Be euer drawne together into one , And taught in such accordance to agree ? ( 11. 841-846 ) Love united all the conflicting opposites and ...
... doth appeare . For how should else things so far from attone And so great enemies as of them bee , Be euer drawne together into one , And taught in such accordance to agree ? ( 11. 841-846 ) Love united all the conflicting opposites and ...
Page 152
... doth lend : For some so goodly gratious are by kind , That euery action doth them much commend , And in the eyes of men great liking find ; Which others , that haue greater skill in mind , Though they enforce themselues , cannot attaine ...
... doth lend : For some so goodly gratious are by kind , That euery action doth them much commend , And in the eyes of men great liking find ; Which others , that haue greater skill in mind , Though they enforce themselues , cannot attaine ...
Contents
CALENDER | 1 |
HIERARCHY AND CYCLIC TIME IN THE MORAL | 32 |
COLIN CLOUTS MEDITATION UPON INNER | 66 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Albrecht Dürer allegorical Astrophel beauty Bregog Calidore Calidore's classical Clouts Come Home Colin Clout Comus contemplation courtesy criticism Cuddie death describes dolphins doth E. M. W. Tillyard Edmund Spenser Elizabethan English Essays Faerie Queene flock flowers four humours Graces happy hath haue heauen hikari to yami Hobbinol human humour Ibid idea ideal interpretation Iulye Iune Januarye John Milton knight lady landscape lines literary Literature London loue Lycidas meaning Mirror for Magistrates moral eclogues mought Mythology nature Numbers otium Panofsky passage Pastoral Elegy pastoral poetry pastoral world Pastorella Perigot plaintive eclogues poet poetic Poetry of Edmund praise proverbs reader recreative eclogues Renaissance Renaissance no hikari Renaissance pastoral represents romantic Rosalind says scene shade Shepheardes Calender shepherd similar Sixth Book song Spenserian stanza story symbol theme Thenot Theocritus Thomalin Thomas Warton thou umbra Virgil's Virgilian vision vnto Warton winter words York