Journal of the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association, Volumen12Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association., 1991 |
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Página 16
... appears , since at bottom the admonitions against loving guests or young boys address the unstable nature of sudden love and the newefangelness of passion , carnal love- matters with which Chaucer is deeply concerned in the Troilus ...
... appears , since at bottom the admonitions against loving guests or young boys address the unstable nature of sudden love and the newefangelness of passion , carnal love- matters with which Chaucer is deeply concerned in the Troilus ...
Página 32
... appears unmoralized - and the moralization most often may be summed up in that economical line from the early thirteenth - century romance Yder : “ N'est pas [ bien ] sens qui d'amer fole . ” We have seen that Myrrha appears in that ...
... appears unmoralized - and the moralization most often may be summed up in that economical line from the early thirteenth - century romance Yder : “ N'est pas [ bien ] sens qui d'amer fole . ” We have seen that Myrrha appears in that ...
Página 34
... appears as one of the monitory exempla in the speech of Diana , who seeks to dissuade the lover / narrator from following Venus . In Boccaccio's Amorosa visione , another poem of spiritual pilgrimage , she appears in Cupid's train , an ...
... appears as one of the monitory exempla in the speech of Diana , who seeks to dissuade the lover / narrator from following Venus . In Boccaccio's Amorosa visione , another poem of spiritual pilgrimage , she appears in Cupid's train , an ...
Contenido
Hagiographical Parody in the Ysengrimus | 1 |
Mythological Lovers in Chaucers Troilus and Criseyde | 13 |
GENERAL | 22 |
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action amor Amorosa visione appears associated audience become Cambridge century chapter Chaucer chivalry Christian Clamydes classical Clyomon common composers contemporary continues court critical death demonstrate described desire discussion drama early Elizabeth Elizabethan English essay example fact faith female Fierabras Floripe Floripe's French give important interest interpretation Italy John King knight learned letter lines literary literature living London lord lovers meaning medieval Middle Ages misogyny moral Myrrha myth nature notes Orpheus pastoral performed play poems poet poetic poetry political popular present provides Queen question readers reading reference Renaissance represents role Saracen scene scholars seen serve singing social society Spenser Stampa story style succession suggests sweet tale traditional Troilus understanding University Press verse voice woman women writes young