To Tell a Story: Narrative Theory and Practice: Papers Read at a Clark Library Seminar, February 4, 1972William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, University of California, 1973 - 102 pages |
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Page 33
... Spenser makes no bones of the fact that Guyon's de- struction is wrathful and pitiless . Yet two stanzas after he wrecks the bower , Guyon is wonderfully generous to and pity- ing of Acrasia's victims . Either Spenser is confused , or ...
... Spenser makes no bones of the fact that Guyon's de- struction is wrathful and pitiless . Yet two stanzas after he wrecks the bower , Guyon is wonderfully generous to and pity- ing of Acrasia's victims . Either Spenser is confused , or ...
Page 37
... Spenser says : There , whence that Musick seemed heard to bee , Was the faire Witch her selfe now solacing , With a ... Spenser has made the reader undergo the same pattern of anticipated knowledge and full experience that the characters ...
... Spenser says : There , whence that Musick seemed heard to bee , Was the faire Witch her selfe now solacing , With a ... Spenser has made the reader undergo the same pattern of anticipated knowledge and full experience that the characters ...
Page 38
... Spenser makes it literally a strong version of Acrasia's silk and silver veil , of which he says , four stanzas earlier , " More subtile web Arachne cannot spin " ( st . 77 ) . Where we apprehended Spenser's point in the Cave of Mammon ...
... Spenser makes it literally a strong version of Acrasia's silk and silver veil , of which he says , four stanzas earlier , " More subtile web Arachne cannot spin " ( st . 77 ) . Where we apprehended Spenser's point in the Cave of Mammon ...
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Common terms and phrases
Absalom and Achitophel Acrasia's action Adam Adam's Aeneid Alpers Aristotelian Aristotle Aristotle's Augustan Prose axis beginning Book Bower of Bliss Burke canto Cave of Mammon Century character Clark Library critical term dramatic Dryden Earl Miner ence English epic episode Faerie Queene feel fictional Frye Frye's garden Gondibert Gorgias Guyon Guyon's destruction hence hero human interpretation Lancelot Andrewes language literary experience literature logic man's meaning medias res metaphor middle Milton mimetic mind mode moral movement narration novel object Orlando Furioso Palmer paper Paradise Lost pattern phrase poem poet's poetic Poetry problem prose question reader reality relation rhetorical narrative Roland Barthes seek seems self-conscious sense sentence sequence sermon Seventeenth Seventeenth-century narrative significant simply speeches Spenser stanza story strength relative Structuralist structure style T. S. Eliot tells thing Thucydides tion Western narrative William Andrews Clark word writing