The Consolation of Otherness: The Male Love Elegy in Milton, Gray and TennysonMcFarland, Incorporated, Publishers, 6 черв. 2002 р. - 184 стор. The social and religious constraints of their time may have prevented John Milton, Thomas Gray, and Alfred Tennyson from conscious expression or even unconscious recognition of the true extent of their love and devotion to their young male friends, but it lies at the heart of their emotional lives and poetry. Connected by the extraordinary coincidence that each of their loved ones died young, Milton, Gray, and Tennyson are also connected by the male-love elegies that sprang from their grief. This work examines the relationships between John Milton and Charles Diodati, Thomas Gray and Richard West, and Alfred Tennyson and Arthur Hallam through a critical study of Milton's "Epitaphium Damonis," Gray's "Elegy," and Tennyson's "In Memoriam." It shows how their concepts of otherness and difference from the people around them provided comfort after the loss of their loved ones. It discusses Milton's use of Latin to mourn his friend and screen the most resounding expressions of his love while keeping at bay those not ready to understand his concept of otherness, how Gray used both Latin and the vernacular to express his grief while conforming to social and religious constraints by also addressing larger concerns; and Tennyson's ability to use the vernacular with complete security to speak out and yet hold back private thoughts about the person he loved more than almost any other in his life. |
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... felt so acutely the pangs of otherness and alienation from society . The one regime under which they could unapologetically claim citizenship was that of letters and the familial interconnection , the welcome intimacy with like minds ...
... felt so keenly the sneering alienation of his peers , exile has a double force : not merely the loss of a particular friend but the return of an alien world . The cold winds roar and tear the crepuscular stillness ; boughs sway ...
... felt no love for any one person after the death of West , and of Mrs Gray ( which latter he felt less keenly ) , except possibly Dr Wharton and his family . Even before his mother's death , he had begun to suffer a desiccation of the ...
Зміст
Introduction | 1 |
CHAPTER TWOA Secret Sympathy | 45 |
CHAPTER THREE Points of Resistance | 90 |
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The Consolation of Otherness: The Male Love Elegy in Milton, Gray and Tennyson Matthew Curr Обмежений попередній перегляд - 2002 |