Colin's Campus: Cambridge Life and the English Eclogue"Colin's Campus argues that pastoral poetry is inevitably a backwards-looking genre, preoccupied with the past. This preoccupation in the case of Spenser, as well as his pastoral followers, returned him to the Cambridge he had recently left behind, not the court to which he never really arrived." "Responding to the pastoral-court connection which has been at the center of nearly all historical considerations of pastoral for the past two decades, this study invites readers to seriously consider the reverse connection, that is, the academic ingredients in the pastoral world."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
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122 ÆäÀÌÁö
That Edward King drowned in 1637 was an accident , ¡± he says , ¡° but it need not
have been an accident that Milton , who was 29 in that year , decided to write a
pastoral elegy on his death ¡± ( ¡° Grene Path , ¡± 4 ) . Both Virgil and Spenser ...
That Edward King drowned in 1637 was an accident , ¡± he says , ¡° but it need not
have been an accident that Milton , who was 29 in that year , decided to write a
pastoral elegy on his death ¡± ( ¡° Grene Path , ¡± 4 ) . Both Virgil and Spenser ...
134 ÆäÀÌÁö
Like Frank Kermode , he presents the case that pastoral poetry is essentially a
nostalgic product , that the pastoralist lives and writes in one world ( urban ) and
recollects another ( rural ) . See Kermode ' s English Pastoral Poetry , from the ...
Like Frank Kermode , he presents the case that pastoral poetry is essentially a
nostalgic product , that the pastoralist lives and writes in one world ( urban ) and
recollects another ( rural ) . See Kermode ' s English Pastoral Poetry , from the ...
143 ÆäÀÌÁö
Alpers notes that Johnson ¡° may be thought to have established the tradition that
excellent critics write weakly or perversely ... Johnson writes in Rambler 36 , ¡° for
though nature itself , philosophically considered , be exhaustible , yet its general
...
Alpers notes that Johnson ¡° may be thought to have established the tradition that
excellent critics write weakly or perversely ... Johnson writes in Rambler 36 , ¡° for
though nature itself , philosophically considered , be exhaustible , yet its general
...
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