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Pagina 89
CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE ( 1598 ) Hero and Leander First Sestiad IO On Hellespont , guilty of true love's blood , In view , and opposite , two cities stood , Sea borderers , disjoin'd by Neptune's might ; The one Abydos , the other Sestos ...
CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE ( 1598 ) Hero and Leander First Sestiad IO On Hellespont , guilty of true love's blood , In view , and opposite , two cities stood , Sea borderers , disjoin'd by Neptune's might ; The one Abydos , the other Sestos ...
Pagina 224
He acquainted himself with Ovid by translating the Amores , and Hero and Leander was essentially an Ovidian poem , even though his actual source was Musaeus , an Alexandrian poet of the sixth century . Hero was a priestess of Venus at ...
He acquainted himself with Ovid by translating the Amores , and Hero and Leander was essentially an Ovidian poem , even though his actual source was Musaeus , an Alexandrian poet of the sixth century . Hero was a priestess of Venus at ...
Pagina 226
o army across a bridge of boats in 480 B.C. Alexander the Great also crossed at this point , and centuries later , in an attempt to relive the old legend , Byron swam it with a friend . guilty of true love's blood : because Hero and ...
o army across a bridge of boats in 480 B.C. Alexander the Great also crossed at this point , and centuries later , in an attempt to relive the old legend , Byron swam it with a friend . guilty of true love's blood : because Hero and ...
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Inhoudsopgave
INTRODUCTION page | 1 |
Spenser | 7 |
Scyllas Metamorphosis | 14 |
Copyright | |
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Adonis affect appear arms beauty believed birds blood breast breath cheeks course dead death delight desire divine doth ears earth Elizabethan Endymion eyes face fair fall fear feeling fire flower give Glaucus goddess gods gold golden grief ground hand hath head heart heaven Hero honour hope kind kiss Leander leave light lines lips live Lodge look love's lovers lust Marlowe means mind mortal move Muses Nature never night nymphs once Ovid passion Phoebe pity play pleasure poem poet poetry poor queen quoth rest Rosamond Scylla seems sense Shakespeare shame sighs sight sorrow soul spring stars story sweet tears tell thee things thou thought touch true turned unto Venus wanton Whilst wind women yield youth