Paper Search Console

Home Search Page About Contact

Journal Title

Title of Journal: Neophilologus

Search In Journal Title:

Abbravation: Neophilologus

Search In Journal Abbravation:

Publisher

Springer Netherlands

Search In Publisher:

DOI

10.1007/bf02695364

Search In DOI:

ISSN

1572-8668

Search In ISSN:
Search In Title Of Papers:

“Et Rome Rome a vaincu seulement” Du Bellay’s Son

Authors: Michael Haldane
Publish Date: 2012/10/18
Volume: 97, Issue: 3, Pages: 465-480
PDF Link

Abstract

Joachim du Bellay’s Sonnet III from the Antiquitez de Rome ‘Nouveau venu qui cherches Rome en Rome’ and its neoLatin source an epigram by Janus Vitalis have given rise to much diffuse comparative critical attention The aim of this article is to analyse du Bellay’s sonnet in far greater depth than has heretofore been the case explaining and evaluating his alterations of his primary source and detailing the effects of his employment of other sources namely Lucan’s Pharsalia Castiglione’s sonnet ‘Superbi colli’ and in particular Ovid’s Metamorphoses Exploration of the nomen theme attaches significance to the ten occurrences of the name of Rome while the relationship between Time Fortune and personal responsibility is considered Du Bellay’s additions are seen to emphasise the folly of pride and apply to contemporary France the admonitory moral of the vulnerability of a nation divided by civil war Particular attention is paid to stylistic devices such as epanalepsis and mesozeugma tripartite constructions and Du Bellay’s use of the sonnetform to establish—and occasionally break—patterns and expectations Tension is observed between grammatical simplicity and patterned rhetoric as the author attempts linguistic portrayal of the paradox of the enduring ruins of Rome


Keywords:

References


.
Search In Abstract Of Papers:
Other Papers In This Journal:


Search Result: