The Burial-places of Memory: Epic Underworlds in Vergil, Dante, and Milton |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 7
Page 65
... Aeschylus offers an entry to the Commedia from a different , if closely related , direction . At the end of The Eumenides the Furies are not only incorporated , they are renamed , the Erinys become Eumenides and settle down Language and ...
... Aeschylus offers an entry to the Commedia from a different , if closely related , direction . At the end of The Eumenides the Furies are not only incorporated , they are renamed , the Erinys become Eumenides and settle down Language and ...
Page 66
... Aeschylus makes it clear that they are the same rather physically unlovely creatures they have always been . What the renaming does signify , one might argue , is a change in us , in our relation to the Furies , in our way of un ...
... Aeschylus makes it clear that they are the same rather physically unlovely creatures they have always been . What the renaming does signify , one might argue , is a change in us , in our relation to the Furies , in our way of un ...
Page 215
... Aeschylus , 64 , 65 Alcinous , 20 Allecto ( fury ) , 58 Allusions , 170 , 177 , 184. See also individual authors and works ; Naming Amphiaraus , 109 Anachronisms , 4-5 Anchises , 12 , 26 , 50-51 , 53 , 81 . See also Aeneas Ancients and ...
... Aeschylus , 64 , 65 Alcinous , 20 Allecto ( fury ) , 58 Allusions , 170 , 177 , 184. See also individual authors and works ; Naming Amphiaraus , 109 Anachronisms , 4-5 Anchises , 12 , 26 , 50-51 , 53 , 81 . See also Aeneas Ancients and ...
Contents
The Easy Descent from Avernus | 17 |
Language and History | 57 |
Traditions and the Individual Talent | 118 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
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