Rivermen: A Romantic Iconography of the River and the SourceMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 1 wrz 1989 - 232 Rivermen examines the mythic context and psychological dimensions of the river and its source through an investigation of the recurring motifs associated with the source in classical and English literature -the heroic quest, the river journey, and the naiad or muse. Frederic Colwell focuses on the writings of those redoubtable rivermen, the English Romantic poets. He explores poems by Wordsworth, Coleridge, Keats, and Shelley, showing that the image of the river is used in their work as a compelling archetype and a metaphor for the nature and process of the creative impulse. From the preface: "Unlike the rhythms of oceans, rivers have direction and a purposive flow. The river's will is always its own, not laid down by man, for whom the river passage demands a surrender to its will, its currents and eddies. To move with the flow is to course with time and change; to stand astride or view it from a height offers the prophetic stance by which we contemplate its entire passage, its past, present, and the brightening waters or rippling shoals ahead." |
Spis treści
3 | |
The Wordsworthian River | 8 |
2 Sources | 37 |
3 The Guardian and the Spring | 46 |
Maid Woman Bower and Wilderness | 67 |
Her Literary and Social History | 101 |
Endymion | 115 |
Lamia Belles Dames and Deceiving Elves | 127 |
Heroic Landscape and the River Journey in Alastor | 145 |
9 The Witch of Atlas and the Mythic Geography of the Nile | 164 |
Epilogue | 186 |
Notes | 189 |
211 | |
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Rivermen: A Romantic Iconography of the River and the Source Frederic Stewart Colwell Ograniczony podgląd - 1989 |
Rivermen: A Romantic Iconography of the River and the Source Frederic Stewart Colwell Podgląd niedostępny - 1989 |
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
Aegina Alastor Alfoxden ancient Artemis beauty beneath bower bright brook Cambridge cave classical Coleridge Coleridge's course creation creative creatures dark death Derwent described Diana Dorothy Dorothy Wordsworth dream earth Ecclesiastical Sonnets elements embrace Endymion eyes familiar flow flowers fountain geography goddess Goslar Greek Harold Bloom haunts Hermes Herodotus Herse human Hunt's Ibid identified imagination journey Keats Keats's Kubla Khan lady lake Lamia landscape Lemprière Lewti literary London lovers Lucy Lycius maid Mary moon mother muses mystery myth mythic mythology naiad narrative narrator nature Nereids night Nile Nympholept nymphs Oxford paradise passage pastoral Pausanias Peacock Percy Bysshe Shelley Plutarch poem poem's poet poet's poetic poetry Prelude quest quester River Duddon riverscape role Romantic Romantic poetry sacred Shelley sister Sonnets spring stanza stream thou tion transformed University Press voice vols waters William Wordsworth winds Witch of Atlas Wordsworth Xanadu youth