The Voice of the Phoenix: Metaphors of Death and Rebirth in Classics of the Iberian Renaissance |
Contents
Fateful Passion and Prison Imagery | 1 |
Subjection to Fate or Passionate Willing? Reassessing Love | 27 |
Obsequious Love as the Egos Release from Frustration | 53 |
Copyright | |
9 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
able acceptance actually amor appear assume attitude basis beauty becomes cancionero cause Cervantes character claim concept concerning considered critics culture death dependence desire developed Diana discussion Don Quijote effect elements emotional emphasis enchantment Ethics example existence experience explain expressed fact fate feelings Fray Luis freedom Garcilaso hand hence human idea ideal implied important individual influence interest interpretation issue lady language Lapesa Lazarillo lines literature London lover lyric Madrid means metaphor mind Montemayor moral nature novel object observation original pain passion pastoral period persona perspective poem poet poetry possible present question reading reality reason referred regard relation Renaissance represented result rhetorical romantic seems seen sense sexual Sonnet spiritual stanza Studies suffering suggest theory thought tradition trans University University Press writes York