Literature & Sacrament: The Sacred and the Secular in John DonneDuquesne University Press, 1999 - 338 In this innovative study, Theresa DiPasquale examines John Donne's theological and ideological responses to the Reformation debate over the sacraments, and how this debate greatly influenced his view of the written word as visible sign and of the poet as the quasi-divine maker of that sign, and of the reader as its receiver. This study, then, attempts to reconstruct Donne's own, quite nuanced theology of sacrament to provide a guide to his poetics, and, in particular, to his conception of the exchange between author and reader." |
Z wnętrza książki
Wyniki 1 - 3 z 54
Strona 149
... lady in particular . Rounding out the first stanza of " Aire and Angels " at the sonnet - like length of 14 lines , Donne's persona describes his surrender to the Petrarchan convention of the Lady's features as Cupid's dwell- ing places ...
... lady in particular . Rounding out the first stanza of " Aire and Angels " at the sonnet - like length of 14 lines , Donne's persona describes his surrender to the Petrarchan convention of the Lady's features as Cupid's dwell- ing places ...
Strona 178
... lady's irritation . And as for the " living walls of Jet " : what self- respecting Protestant lady would submit to being " cloysterd " anywhere ? In Tudor England , the speaker's insistence that the flea is a monastery practically ...
... lady's irritation . And as for the " living walls of Jet " : what self- respecting Protestant lady would submit to being " cloysterd " anywhere ? In Tudor England , the speaker's insistence that the flea is a monastery practically ...
Strona 210
... lady.30 " What would'st thou say ? " the speaker asks the ring / posey , " shall both our properties by thee bee spoke ... ? " ( 3 ) , and with this question , he opens up the possibility that the poem's meaning , no less than the ...
... lady.30 " What would'st thou say ? " the speaker asks the ring / posey , " shall both our properties by thee bee spoke ... ? " ( 3 ) , and with this question , he opens up the possibility that the poem's meaning , no less than the ...
Spis treści
ONE Sacramental Crossing | 29 |
Two Deigne at My Hands | 58 |
THREE Cunning Elements and Artful Turns | 101 |
Prawa autorskie | |
Nie pokazano 8 innych sekcji
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Literature and Sacrament: The Sacred and the Secular in John Donne Theresa M. DiPasquale Podgląd niedostępny - 2001 |
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
addresses analogy argues Astrophil baptism blood Calvin Christian cited Communion confession consecrated Cor1 Cor5 Corona Council of Trent Countess of Bedford Countess of Huntingdon Crosse crucified death divine doctrine Donne explains Donne's Donne's poem doth efficacious English Protestant Eucharistic Poetry ex opere operato faith Flea God's Goodfriday Goodyer grace hath Herbert Hester Holy Sonnets Homilies Hooker insists Inst Jeat Ring Jesuit Jesus John Donne John Donne Journal John Donne's La Corona lady language lines little world liturgy Lord lover lyric Magdalen McNees offering Petrarch Petrarchan poem's poet poet's poet/speaker poetic praise prayer preaching present priest quoted rament reader reading Real Presence receive religion religious Resurrection Roman Catholic sacra sacramental sacrifice salvation says seal Shawcross signified soul speaker spiritual stanza stresses thee theological things Thomas Hester thou tion transubstantiation Trent Tridentine Mass Twicknam unto Valediction verse epistle verse letter visible sign words Wotton writing