Journal of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association, Volumen12Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association., 1991 |
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Criseyde who evokes the myth of Orpheus in her first sorrowful speech after the announcement of her impending deportation : though in erthe ytwynned be we tweyne , Yet in the feld of pite , out of peyne , That hight Elisos , shal we ben ...
Criseyde who evokes the myth of Orpheus in her first sorrowful speech after the announcement of her impending deportation : though in erthe ytwynned be we tweyne , Yet in the feld of pite , out of peyne , That hight Elisos , shal we ben ...
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queen of the underworld grant it on condition that Orpheus not look behind him as he leads Eurydice out of Hades . He joyfully consents , but his love for her and his anxiety for her safety make him forget his promise .
queen of the underworld grant it on condition that Orpheus not look behind him as he leads Eurydice out of Hades . He joyfully consents , but his love for her and his anxiety for her safety make him forget his promise .
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In the poems of love , lovers and their spokesmen ignore this traditionally accepted interpretation of the myth in order to construct a " lovers ' Orpheus , ” a character who typifies the successful lover.37 This is Criseyde's ...
In the poems of love , lovers and their spokesmen ignore this traditionally accepted interpretation of the myth in order to construct a " lovers ' Orpheus , ” a character who typifies the successful lover.37 This is Criseyde's ...
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Contenido
Hagiographical Parody in the Ysengrimus | 1 |
Mythological Lovers in Chaucers Troilus and Criseyde | 13 |
GENERAL | 22 |
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