Thoth, Volume 15Graduate students of the English Department, Syracuse University, 1974 - American literature |
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Page 5
... Dreamer is in fact a very sophisticated and compassionate character . True , the Dreamer is dull from lack of sleep , but he is not deaf and blind . He hears the Knight's lament and knows all too well that his lady is dead . Why , then ...
... Dreamer is in fact a very sophisticated and compassionate character . True , the Dreamer is dull from lack of sleep , but he is not deaf and blind . He hears the Knight's lament and knows all too well that his lady is dead . Why , then ...
Page 7
... Dreamer's surrogate ... ( pp . 870-71 ) . Thus , Bronson suggests that the Dreamer and the Knight are not two separate characters , but rather two aspects of the same character . The grief the Dreamer is not able to bear awake becomes ...
... Dreamer's surrogate ... ( pp . 870-71 ) . Thus , Bronson suggests that the Dreamer and the Knight are not two separate characters , but rather two aspects of the same character . The grief the Dreamer is not able to bear awake becomes ...
Page 11
... Dreamer is meant to take away from his dream . While the poem may not be an attack on the conventions of courtly love , it does seem to minimize their importance . At the beginning of the poem , all the Dreamer can do is lament his ...
... Dreamer is meant to take away from his dream . While the poem may not be an attack on the conventions of courtly love , it does seem to minimize their importance . At the beginning of the poem , all the Dreamer can do is lament his ...
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Common terms and phrases
Apollonian Auden audience Bachelor beauty becomes Blithedale Romance Bridge Broken Heart Bronson Bucolics Carol Jackson characters Chaucer Chloe Clerimont comedy comic courtly love Coverdale Coverdale's critics Dauphine Dauphine's death Dembo Dion dream Dreamer English Epicoene Epicoene's Euphranea fact Ford Gallatea Hart Crane Hawthorne Hawthorne's INDIANA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES Ithocles Jonson's King Kittredge Knight Kreuzer lady language Leibowitz LIBRARIES UNIVERSITATIS literary London LUX SIGILLUM Mandeville's Travels marriage moral Morose Morose's narrator nature noise Orgilus Penthea Pharamond Philaster play play's plot poems poetic poetry R. P. Blackmur reader rejected relationship revenge Reveries Royal Palm satire scatological scene sense SIGILLUM ET VERITAS Silent Woman Sir John Mandeville situation social society Stella Stephen Crane Strephon suggests Swift Syracuse University THOTH Travels of Sir tree Truewit Univ UNIVERSITATIS LUX UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES SIGILLUM University Press VERITAS INDIANENSIS VERITAS MDCCCXX VERITAS SIGILLUM W. H. Auden York