Illuminator, Makar, Vates: Visions of Poetry in the Fifteenth Century, Volume 10 |
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Page 53
... significance of his dream immediately . Rather the process of writing makes order out of experience and enables him to recognize the truths his vision has revealed . In the final portion of the poem , the poet - narrator , now in ...
... significance of his dream immediately . Rather the process of writing makes order out of experience and enables him to recognize the truths his vision has revealed . In the final portion of the poem , the poet - narrator , now in ...
Page 73
... significance of his experience or the deliberate delusiveness of his rhetoric . Like the combination of fable and moralitas , Henryson's manipulation of styles encourages the reader to look beneath the surface of his language to its ...
... significance of his experience or the deliberate delusiveness of his rhetoric . Like the combination of fable and moralitas , Henryson's manipulation of styles encourages the reader to look beneath the surface of his language to its ...
Page 118
... significance of the fall of Troy . Neither Paris nor Helen is to blame , she reveals ; rather the fall is part of a larger scheme of the gods . Aeneas's pathos and his laments for Troy , for Priam as a victim of Fortune , and for his ...
... significance of the fall of Troy . Neither Paris nor Helen is to blame , she reveals ; rather the fall is part of a larger scheme of the gods . Aeneas's pathos and his laments for Troy , for Priam as a victim of Fortune , and for his ...
Common terms and phrases
Aeneas Aeneid allegory Amphion aureate Boccaccio Canterbury Canterbury Tales century Chaucer Chaucerian Conforte context contrast craft Cresseid critical David defines derk develops Douglas's draw attention Dunbar effect eloquence emphasis enameling Eneados Eneas Eneas's English enluminer example Fables Fall of Princes fame fenzeit fifteenth fifteenth-century poets Finally Garlande Gavin Douglas Geoffrey Chaucer God's Hawes's Henryson high style human ideal illumination introduces John Lydgate Kingis Quair Lady language lines linked literary literature Lydgate's makar manuscripts meaning medieval medium metaphor Minor Poems moralitas narrator narrator's noble Nun's Priest's Tale Orpheus outset Palice of Honour poet's poetic power of poetry praise Prol prologue Psalms Pucell Quair quest refers rethorik rhetoric Robert Henryson role Siege of Thebes significance Skelton speech stanza Stephen Hawes stylistic suggests Tale tion tradition translation Troilus Troy Book truth University Press view of poetry Virgil's virtue vision of poetry William Dunbar words worldly writing