Pastoral
Contribuinte(s) |
Moul, Victoria |
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Data(s) |
2016
|
Resumo |
This chapter argues that Milton’s Epitaphium Damonis, a neo-Latin pastoral lament on the death of Charles Diodati, is marked by the author's Petrarchan self-fashioning. This is achieved through intertextual engagement with Petrarch's Bucolicum Carmen (especially Ecls. 1 and 10). Milton as the wandering Thyrsis, undertaking a methaphorical and literal journey into the world of Italian humanism, appropriates and adapts the metaphorical departure from and return to a pastoral world now shattered by plague and death. Recourse to the quasi-Augustinian monasticism of Petrarchan neo-Latin pastoral facilitates the poem's crossing of a monastic limen via its subtle interaction with a hagiographic intertext, the Vita Sancti Deodati. Now pastoral saint and scholar become united in death and in subsequent apotheosis. |
Identificador |
http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/pastoral(424e699a-aeea-42a7-b795-f0da85fcdd22).html |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Cambridge University Press |
Direitos |
info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess |
Fonte |
Haan , E 2016 , Pastoral . in V Moul (ed.) , Neo-Latin Literature . Cambridge University Press , Cambridge . |
Tipo |
contributionToPeriodical |