Elizabethan Erotic Narratives: Irony and Pathos in the Ovidian Poetry of Shakespeare, Marlowe, and Their Contemporaries |
Contents
Ovid and Ovidian Poetry | 3 |
Glaucus and Scilla | 36 |
Venus and Adonis | 52 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Adonis's allegorical allusion Amatoria ambivalence Amores appears Astraea Barthélemy Aneau Beaumont beauty boar Book chastity Christopher Marlowe comedy comic conceit couplet critics Cupid's Davenport Diana digression edition Elizabethan epyllion Epic epyllia erotic poetry eroticism Faerie Queene Faunus and Melliflora Faunus's Glaucus and Scilla goddess grotesque Hero and Leander Hero's Heroides homoeroticism imagery ironic irony John Marston Jove Jove's Kinsayder kiss late Elizabethan Lecocq lines literary Lodge Lodge's London lovers lust Marlowe's Hero Marston Metamorphoses mistress moral Musaeus Musaeus's myth mythological narrator narrator's Neptune nymphs Ovid Ovid's Ovid's episode Ovid's poetry Ovidian Ovidian narrative parody passage passion pathos Pigmalions Image poem poem's Poesis poetic poets portrait praise reader Renaissance Renaissance Tradition rhetorical Salmacis and Hermaphroditus Salmacis's satire Satire VI satirists Satyres Shakespeare Shakespeare and Marlowe Sidney's sixteenth century sonnets sophisticated Spenser's stanza story strategy suggests thematic Thomas Lodge thou transformation translation Venus and Adonis Venus's verbal Weever witty wooing writing