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  2. Allegory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegory

    Sometimes the meaning of an allegory can be lost, even if art historians suspect that the artwork is an allegory of some kind. [21] Allegory has an ability to freeze the temporality of a story, while infusing it with a spiritual context. Mediaeval thinking accepted allegory as having a reality underlying any rhetorical or fictional uses. The ...

  3. Allegory in Renaissance literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegory_in_Renaissance...

    Three-world theory. By the 16th century, allegory was firmly linked to what is known as the Elizabethan world picture, taken from Ptolemy and Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite. This theory postulates the existence of three worlds: the sublunary world we live in, subject to change. the celestial world, the world of the planets and stars, unchanging.

  4. Pearl (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearl_(poem)

    Pearl (Middle English: Perle) is a late 14th-century Middle English poem that is considered one of the most important surviving Middle English works. With elements of medieval allegory and from the dream vision genre, the poem is written in a North-West Midlands variety of Middle English and is highly—though not consistently—alliterative; there is, among other stylistic features, a complex ...

  5. The Seafarer (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Seafarer_(poem)

    The Seafarer is an Old English poem giving a first-person account of a man alone on the sea. The poem consists of 124 lines, followed by the single word "Amen". It is recorded only at folios 81 verso – 83 recto [1] of the tenth-century [2] Exeter Book, one of the four surviving manuscripts of Old English poetry.

  6. Danse Macabre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danse_Macabre

    John Lydgate's Dance of Death is a Middle English poem written in the early 15th century. It is a translation of a French poem of the same name, and it is one of the most popular examples of the Danse Macabre genre. [28] The poem is a moral allegory in which Death leads a procession of people from all walks of life to their graves.

  7. Piers Plowman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piers_Plowman

    The poem, a mix of theological allegory and social satire, concerns the narrator/dreamer's quest for the true Christian life in the context of medieval Catholicism.This journey takes place within a series of dream visions; the dreamer seeks, among other things, the allegorical characters Dowel ("Do-Well"), Dobet ("Do-Better"), and Dobest ("Do-Best").

  8. Absalom and Achitophel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absalom_and_Achitophel

    John Dryden by Sir Godfrey Kneller. Absalom and Achitophel is a celebrated satirical poem by John Dryden, written in heroic couplets and first published in 1681. The poem tells the Biblical tale of the rebellion of Absalom against King David; in this context it is an allegory used to represent a story contemporary to Dryden, concerning King Charles II and the Exclusion Crisis (1679–1681).

  9. The Faerie Queene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Faerie_Queene

    The Faerie Queene is an English epic poem by Edmund Spenser.Books I–III were first published in 1590, then republished in 1596 together with books IV–VI. The Faerie Queene is notable for its form: at over 36,000 lines and over 4,000 stanzas, [1] it is one of the longest poems in the English language; it is also the work in which Spenser invented the verse form known as the Spenserian ...