Sea-mark: The Metaphorical Voyage, Spenser to MiltonLiverpool University Press, 1997 - 227 pages An original study of the use made by a number of major writers in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England of the metaphor of the voyage, showing how powerfully it operated, and how fundamental it is for our proper understanding of some of the best-known works of Renaissance literature. "This well-written and jargon-free book is recommended for academic libraries supporting both undergraduates and advanced students and scholars."—Choice "... an interesting and worthwhile read for both scholars and students."—Early Modern Literary Studies |
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Page 168
... Seneca writeth , Vere Magnum , habere fragilitatem hominis , securitatem Dei ) ' . 40 The ' height of style ' refers to the character of what Seneca is saying rather than to his phraseology . Seneca is accused of presumption , or at ...
... Seneca writeth , Vere Magnum , habere fragilitatem hominis , securitatem Dei ) ' . 40 The ' height of style ' refers to the character of what Seneca is saying rather than to his phraseology . Seneca is accused of presumption , or at ...
Page 173
... Seneca's high claims for the potential of human nature on the grounds that Christianity disproved them . What has the acquisition of wisdom , brought from afar by Hercules , to do with the Christian faith ? First , he interprets the ...
... Seneca's high claims for the potential of human nature on the grounds that Christianity disproved them . What has the acquisition of wisdom , brought from afar by Hercules , to do with the Christian faith ? First , he interprets the ...
Page 175
... Seneca's , commend- ing the good things produced in adversity , but its height is entirely Bacon's responsibility ... Seneca did not in fact aspire to . The parenthesis , ' ( much too high for a Heathen ) ' , can , grammatically ...
... Seneca's , commend- ing the good things produced in adversity , but its height is entirely Bacon's responsibility ... Seneca did not in fact aspire to . The parenthesis , ' ( much too high for a Heathen ) ' , can , grammatically ...
Contents
Chapter OneSPENSER | 19 |
Chapter TwoMARLOWE | 51 |
Chapter ThreeDONNE | 69 |
Copyright | |
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Advancement of Learning adversity Aeneas Bacon become boat Book Calidore Canto chapter Christ Christian Comedy Comedy of Errors course death Desdemona Dido discover divine Donne Donne's doth edition Edwards Ephesus essay Faerie Queene fallen Faustus flat map Florimell fortune George Wilson Knight Greenblatt Guyon hath Heaven Hercules hero honour human Hymne Iago Ibid important Instauratio Magna invention Jew of Malta journey land lost Macbeth MacCaffrey mankind Marinell mariners Marlowe Marlowe's means Merchant of Venice Milton nature navigation Neptune night ocean Othello Paradise passage Pericles Phaedria pilot play poem poet Prometheus Ralegh riches romance Satan says Sea-marke seems Seneca sermons Shakespeare ship shipwreck simile Spenser stanza storm story symbol Tamburlaine Tempest thee things thou University Press Valerius Terminus vessel voyage imagery voyage images voyage metaphor voyages of discovery W. B. Yeats wandering winds Winter's Tale witches word wreck writing wrote