This book examines how epic poetry reflects cultural values, and how, in epic poems, the heroes must meet supernatural beings to find answers to essential questions. The work begins with three chapters on ancient poetry. The first examines how the great epics of particular cultures (ancient Greece's ""Iliad"" and ""Odyssey"", ancient India's ""Mahabharata"") address specific questions or quests inspired by their culture and also define the heroic ideals of their culture and time period.The second and third chapters explore the nearly-universal themes of duty, obligation, and personal fulfillment in ancient epic poetry, including the ""Epic of Gilgamesh"", the ""Aeneid"", and the ""Bhagavad-Gita"", among others. Subsequent chapters take up the main subject of the book, examining the evolution of English epic poetry from the anonymous ""Old English Beowulf"" to Derek Walcott's 1990 poem ""Omeros"". Works covered in this section include Edmund Spenser's ""The Faerie Queene"", John Milton's ""Paradise Lost"", William Blake's ""Milton"", William Wordworth's ""The Prelude"", and Elizabeth Barrett Browning's ""Aurora Leigh"".
- ISBN13 9780786435418
- Publish Date 1 June 2008
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country US
- Imprint McFarland & Co Inc
- Format Paperback
- Pages 210
- Language English