"Sunt Hic Etiam ... Mentem Mortalia Tangunt": (Aen. 1. 161 - 162) Renaissance Transvaluations ; from Vergilean Epic to Shakespearean Heroic DramaUniv. microfilms intern, 1978 - 858 من الصفحات |
المحتوى
RENAISSANCE VERNACULAR DRAMATIC TRANSVALUATIONS | 80 |
91 | 136 |
111 | 140 |
حقوق النشر | |
3 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Achates action Actium Aeneid Alexandria allegorical allusion Antillo Antoine Antony and Cleopatra Antony's Balmas Book Cambridge Carthage Chapter character Chorus Christian Christopher Marlowe Cinthio classical Cleo Cléopatre complex critical Daniel death debate declares depicts Dido's Didone discussion divine Dolce Dolce's dramatic dramatists dream Egypt Egyptian emotional Enobarbus eternal Étienne Jodelle fate final Garnier Giraldi goddess gods Herculean hero Hercules heroic human ical ideal imaginative imitation interpretation Isis Jodelle Jodelle's judgement Julius Caesar London lovers Lucretius Marlowe Marlowe's Mars moral myth nature neo-Platonic Octave Octavius Caesar Osiris Ovid Ovid's pagan passion patra Pazzi philosophical Pistorelli pity Plutarch poem poetic political Princeton problem providential Queen reading Renaissance rhetorical Robert Garnier Roman Rome scene self-conscious Shakespeare Shakespeare's play stage story Studies suicide things thou tion tradition tragedy tragic trans transformation translation triumph Trojan Troy Typhon University Press Venus Vergil Vergilean virtue