Thoth, Volumes 13-15Graduate students of the English Department, Syracuse University, 1973 - American literature |
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Page 30
... narrator invokes Thesiphone . Since she is one of the Furies , she is a particularly suitable overseer for a Book devoted primarily to the torments Troilus suffers for unrequited love . The narrator uses the concluding lines of this ...
... narrator invokes Thesiphone . Since she is one of the Furies , she is a particularly suitable overseer for a Book devoted primarily to the torments Troilus suffers for unrequited love . The narrator uses the concluding lines of this ...
Page 37
... narrator . And finally , there is the superior level of the reader ( or Chaucer ) , a level from which the narrator and his characters appear to be of equal importance , since , as has already been shown , the narrator is himself a ...
... narrator . And finally , there is the superior level of the reader ( or Chaucer ) , a level from which the narrator and his characters appear to be of equal importance , since , as has already been shown , the narrator is himself a ...
Page 38
... narrator's direct description , along with the imagery , also esta- blishes the physical reality of the poem in a way that corresponds to the " scenes " which established the social atmosphere . There is , however , little " scenery ...
... narrator's direct description , along with the imagery , also esta- blishes the physical reality of the poem in a way that corresponds to the " scenes " which established the social atmosphere . There is , however , little " scenery ...
Contents
Johnson Music and Music | 3 |
Hence with the Nightingale | 13 |
The Decadent View of Life | 19 |
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Absolon absurd action Amoretti Auden becomes Beowulf Blithedale Blithedale Romance Book Caligula Channel Firing characters chastity Chaucer Colin comedy comic Comus conscience Coverdale critics Crusoe Crusoe's death describes devil Dowson dramatic dream Dreamer English Epicoene essay fact function Gascoigne's Grendel Guido harmony Hart Crane Hrunting human humor imagery Ithocles Johnson King Knight Lady language lines literary Literature live London Longaker lover Macbeth man's Mandeville's Travels marriage masque means MICHIGAN Milton mind modern monster moral Morose Morose's narrative narrator nature Orgilus Orpheus paradox Plath play poem poet poetic poetry pyle reader reality rejects Reveries Royal Palm satire says scatological scene seems sense Sir John Mandeville society sonnet speech Spenser's spirit stanza Stephen Crane Stevens story suggests Swift Sylvia Plath symbolic Syracuse University Tamburlaine theme THOTH Troilus and Criseyde Truewit Unferth Univ University Press virtue Wallace Stevens woman words York