The Epic VoiceMouton, 1968 - 140 עמודים |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 12
עמוד 32
... follows dramatically from the events that preceded it . Demodocus's song so moves Ulysses that he weeps for his departed friends . King Alcinous , noting the emotion , checks the bard and proposes an athletic contest , in which Ulysses ...
... follows dramatically from the events that preceded it . Demodocus's song so moves Ulysses that he weeps for his departed friends . King Alcinous , noting the emotion , checks the bard and proposes an athletic contest , in which Ulysses ...
עמוד 68
... follows only one of his heroes and must return to follow the exploits of the other . Although there are only three such episodes , their very presence in conjunction with the other narrations tends to overlay the work with restricted ...
... follows only one of his heroes and must return to follow the exploits of the other . Although there are only three such episodes , their very presence in conjunction with the other narrations tends to overlay the work with restricted ...
עמוד 126
... follows upon incident without the confusing contrapuntal qualities of III and IV and without the pseudo - epic expositions of I and II . For the first time in The Faerie Queene , Spenser abjures the in medias res and makes no artificial ...
... follows upon incident without the confusing contrapuntal qualities of III and IV and without the pseudo - epic expositions of I and II . For the first time in The Faerie Queene , Spenser abjures the in medias res and makes no artificial ...
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
Abdiel Achilles Adam Adam's adventures Aegisthus Aeneas's Aeneid Agamemnon allegory Amphialus Andromana angelic Antiphilus Arcadia Ariostan artistic audience Basilius Basilius's Beowulf Book Bowra C. S. Lewis Canto chapter characterization characters creation critics delegated voice device distinction divine dramatic E. M. W. Tillyard English epic epic poem epic simile epic voice episode example exposition Faerie Queene fiction function Guyon hero heroic poem Homer Iliad incident intention ironic Kalander's kind knowledge later limited literary epic main action main plot medias res structure metaphor Milton modulation Musidorus and Pyrocles Musidorus's narrative Nestor's obvious Odyssey Old Arcadia omniscient narration omniscient voice Pamela Paradise Lost parallel Phaeacians Philoclea poet poet's Poetry princes problem Raphael Raphael's narration recitation recognize Red Cross relationship restricted narration restricted voice reveals revision rhetorical romance romantic epic Satan's Sidney Sidney's Arcadia significant speaker Spenser story Swedenberg tangential narrations tion tradition Troy Ulysses Virgil Zelmane