scene

C

01KG6S5PFTJ4GGVW8H762KW1JE

Properties

description
# Scene C ## Overview This entity, labeled "C", is a scene within a larger document. It spans lines 262 to 356 of the source file and is part of the "PDF Workflow Main Test 2026-01-30T00:26:53" collection. ## Context Scene "C" is located within the introduction section labeled "I" ([01KG6S4BKQ53B3KC1BB0SHTW5X]). It follows the scene titled "VENUS AND ADONIS" ([01KG6S5PFYRVQYB5AJDHCEKDZ8]) and precedes the subsection titled "Dolce." ([01KG6S5PFTEQAGC88NK2A1T8A8]). The content was extracted from the file named "pdf-01KG6Q7Q25RHMFT3SJXPV18VFF.txt" ([01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA]). ## Contents This scene contains three chunks of text. The first chunk ([01KG6S6RAMR42W1694146YNEFJ]) discusses the spread of the Venus and Adonis myth from Greek to Roman literature, highlighting Ovid's narrative in *Metamorphoses* and its influence on Dante, Chaucer, and Shakespeare. It notes Shakespeare's adaptation of Ovidian elements, including the story of Salmacis and Hermaphroditus and the Calydonian boar hunt. The second chunk ([01KG6S6RAHEN6RS9KBA2PM9XYR]) continues this discussion, providing specific examples of Ovidian descriptions and their parallels in Shakespeare's poem. It also mentions the motto Shakespeare chose for his poem from Ovid's *Amores*. The third chunk ([01KG6S6RAHE98NXH4XV635YW88]) details the influence of the myth in Renaissance Italian literature, noting its presence in scholarly Latin verse and vernacular poetry, and the impact of Italian renderings of Bion's elegy.
description_generated_at
2026-01-30T06:25:29.811Z
description_model
gemini-2.5-flash-lite
description_title
Scene C
end_line
356
extracted_at
2026-01-30T06:24:08.801Z
extracted_by
structure-extraction-lambda
start_line
262
text
null
title
C

Relationships