Illuminator, Makar, Vates: Visions of Poetry in the Fifteenth Century, Volume 10 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 53
Page i
... changes in the rela- tions between author , publisher , and audience brought about by the widespread use of printing and the growth of a bourgeois reading pub- lic . Changes in the vernacular were so drastic that poets were compelled ...
... changes in the rela- tions between author , publisher , and audience brought about by the widespread use of printing and the growth of a bourgeois reading pub- lic . Changes in the vernacular were so drastic that poets were compelled ...
Page 53
... changes his technique by turning away from the specific events of his story and the leisurely narrative manner of his opening sections to focus on the broad significance of his experience . From his present perspective as author , he ...
... changes his technique by turning away from the specific events of his story and the leisurely narrative manner of his opening sections to focus on the broad significance of his experience . From his present perspective as author , he ...
Page 115
... changes that shape his material explicitly as a medieval tragedy . At the outset , he shifts the first thirteen lines of Virgil's Book II to the end of Book I in order to focus his account exclusively on the fall of Troy , and , within ...
... changes that shape his material explicitly as a medieval tragedy . At the outset , he shifts the first thirteen lines of Virgil's Book II to the end of Book I in order to focus his account exclusively on the fall of Troy , and , within ...
Common terms and phrases
activity Aeneas Ages alliteration appears attention aureate becomes begins Book century changes Chaucer conception concerns consideration context contrast Courte craft create critical David defines describe develops Douglas Douglas's draws dream Dunbar earlier early effect effort eloquence emphasis English enluminer example experience Fables Fall of Princes fame fifteenth fifteenth-century fifteenth-century poets figure Finally follow God's Hawes Henryson Honour human ideal illumination important introduces John Lady language light lines linked literary literature London Lydgate Lydgate's manuscripts matter meaning medieval medium Middle moral narrator narrator's nature noble outset Pastime poem poet poet's poetic poetry points praise present prologue provides Psalms quest reader refers relation represents reveals rhetoric role sense shift significance Skelton speech stanza Studies style stylistic suggests surface Tale tion tradition translation Troy truth turn University Press Virgil's virtue vision William Dunbar wisdom writing