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The pastoral is "a deliberately conventional [[poetry|poem]] expressing an urban poet's nostalgic image of the peace and simplicity of the life of shepherds and other rural folk in an idealized natural setting." Its name derived from the Latin word ''pastor'', shepherd.
A pastoral is "a deliberately conventional [[poetry|poem]] expressing an urban poet's nostalgic image of the peace and simplicity of the life of shepherds and other rural folk in an idealized natural setting" (Abrams 202).


Examples from the [[Renaissance]] include [[Edmund Spenser]]'s ''Shepherd's Calendar'' (1579) and Philip [[Sidney]]'s ''Arcadia'' (1581-84).
The name derived from the Latin word ''pastor'', shepherd.
 
The adjective "pastoral" can be applied to other genres of literatures that take up the classical motifs.
 
Examples from the [[Renaissance]] include [[Edmund Spenser]]'s ''Shepherd's Calendar'' (1579, a collection of pastoral poems) and [[Sidney|Philip Sidney]]'s ''Arcadia'' (1581-84, a pastoral [[romance]]).




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M. H. Abrams: ''A Glossary of Literary Terms''. Seventh Edition. New York et al.: Harcourt Brace, 1999. 202.
M. H. Abrams: ''A Glossary of Literary Terms''. Seventh Edition. New York et al.: Harcourt Brace, 1999.

Revision as of 19:22, 9 January 2009

A pastoral is "a deliberately conventional poem expressing an urban poet's nostalgic image of the peace and simplicity of the life of shepherds and other rural folk in an idealized natural setting" (Abrams 202).

The name derived from the Latin word pastor, shepherd.

The adjective "pastoral" can be applied to other genres of literatures that take up the classical motifs.

Examples from the Renaissance include Edmund Spenser's Shepherd's Calendar (1579, a collection of pastoral poems) and Philip Sidney's Arcadia (1581-84, a pastoral romance).



M. H. Abrams: A Glossary of Literary Terms. Seventh Edition. New York et al.: Harcourt Brace, 1999.