The Burial-places of Memory: Epic Underworlds in Vergil, Dante, and MiltonUniversity of Massachusetts Press, 1987 - 223 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 26 筆
第 8 頁
... past as genuinely past , as over and done with . " One has patience with every kind of living thing , " Emer- son wrote in his journal , " but not with the dead alive . ' " 3 All three poets treated here , I would like to speculate ...
... past as genuinely past , as over and done with . " One has patience with every kind of living thing , " Emer- son wrote in his journal , " but not with the dead alive . ' " 3 All three poets treated here , I would like to speculate ...
第 11 頁
... past to compare with his own performance . The world for him has always been in its important respects much the same , and he has every reason to believe that it will remain so . Lacking as he does a real sense of a past , preliterate ...
... past to compare with his own performance . The world for him has always been in its important respects much the same , and he has every reason to believe that it will remain so . Lacking as he does a real sense of a past , preliterate ...
第 12 頁
... past . One has only to compare Vergil's own ecphrasis ( 8.626– 728 ) describing the shield of Aeneas with its res Italae and Ro- manorum triumphi to see how much his thoroughly historical thought distinguishes him from Homer . There is ...
... past . One has only to compare Vergil's own ecphrasis ( 8.626– 728 ) describing the shield of Aeneas with its res Italae and Ro- manorum triumphi to see how much his thoroughly historical thought distinguishes him from Homer . There is ...
內容
The Easy Descent from Avernus | 17 |
Language and History | 57 |
Traditions and the Individual Talent | 118 |
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常見字詞
Adam Aeneas Aeneid already ancient angels appears attempt become beginning Brunetto Latini calls choice comes Commedia complete course Dante Dante's dark dead death demonic describing discourse divine earth effect epic example experience face fact Fall fallen false fate father fear figure final future give gods hand Heaven Hell hero heroic Homeric human imagination important Inferno instance kind king language light lines living look matter means memory metaphor Milton mind narration narrative nature never Odyssey once origins Paradise Lost passage past perhaps phrase pilgrim poem poet poetry precisely present question reason references relation remarkable reminded repeat Satan seems seen sense shades simply speak speech story suggests surely tell things thir tradition turn University Press Vergil vision voice whole writing