Sir Philip Sidney and ArcadiaFairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1991 - Počet stran: 158 This book rejects the Calvinist and deconstructionist interpretations of Sidney and argues instead for a man of humane and generous sympathies who thought deeply about human experience and the art and function of writing. |
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Strana 15
... never to greeve whyle he doth play as a man may sai his own part truly though others be out , " he writes . The Queen , he knows , is willing to interpret all he does in a wrong sense and , he adds , " I understand I am called very ...
... never to greeve whyle he doth play as a man may sai his own part truly though others be out , " he writes . The Queen , he knows , is willing to interpret all he does in a wrong sense and , he adds , " I understand I am called very ...
Strana 43
... never came . Sidney need not , however , have accepted the tradition unreserv- edly . Certainly he had studied Petrarch , but he was not in the business of mere imitation , of Petrarch or anyone else . He had also admired Troilus and ...
... never came . Sidney need not , however , have accepted the tradition unreserv- edly . Certainly he had studied Petrarch , but he was not in the business of mere imitation , of Petrarch or anyone else . He had also admired Troilus and ...
Strana 66
... Never more valiant . " Sidney might perhaps have intended the motto as an ironic comment , and in conventional commentary on the Hercules episode it could hardly be anything else ; but , in fact , the words can be taken quite literally ...
... Never more valiant . " Sidney might perhaps have intended the motto as an ironic comment , and in conventional commentary on the Hercules episode it could hardly be anything else ; but , in fact , the words can be taken quite literally ...
Obsah
Contents | 11 |
Heroes and Heroics | 27 |
Stella and the Growth of the Heroine | 42 |
Autorská práva | |
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accept action allowed Amphialus Amphialus's appear Argalus Astrophil attempt attention Basilius beauty becomes beginning believes better called Cecropia character claims clear comes course critical danger deal death debate desire developed earlier effect Elizabethan English English Studies episode Erona evidence evil example experience fact falls feeling follows further given gives goes Greville Gynecia hand heart hope human important interest killed kind king knows later lived London lover means mind moral narrative nature never Old Arcadia once original Pamela passion Philanax Philip Philoclea Plangus Poetry present Press princes princesses Pyrocles and Musidorus question reader reason relation response revised role scene seems shows Sidney Sidney's situation stands Stella story Studies tells thinking thought treatment University virtue whole woman women writing young Zelmane