Rose is perhaps the most multivalent symbol in world literature. It can mean love and suffering, innocence and passion, the fleetingness of life and its endless rebirth. From ancient odes to post-apocalyptic novels, the red bloom never wilts on the pages of books. We explore how the image of the rose has changed in literature over the centuries.Antiquity and the Middle Ages: From Aphrodite to the Virgin MaryIn ancient poetry, the rose is an inseparable attribute of the goddess of love, Aphrodite (Venus). In Sappho's poetry, the rose is mentioned as the queen of flowers, piercing with thorns. In Ovid's "Metamorphoses," the rose appears in the myth of the beautiful nymph who turned into a flower. In the Middle Ages, Christianity reinterpreted the rose: it became a symbol of the Virgin Mary (a rose without thorns — her purity). Dante depicts paradise as a white rose in "The Divine Comedy" — the abode of blissful souls. This image will become key for all European mysticism.Shakespeare: Rose Scented Without a NameShakespeare in "Romeo and Juliet" gives the most famous phrase about the rose: "What's in a name? A rose by any other name would smell as sweet." Here, the rose symbolizes essence, independent of its name. Shakespeare has many roses in general: in sonnets, they mean love, beauty, and fragility. In "Hamlet," Ophelia gathers roses (in different translations — other flowers), symbolizing lost innocence.Rose in Romanticism: Exoticism and SufferingThe Romantics of the 19th century (Hugo, Novalis) loved the rose for its duality: beauty and pain, life and death. In Novalis's novel "Henry von Ofterdingen," the blue flower (a symbol of dreams) is sometimes replaced by a rose. In Russian literature, the rose is a constant guest in Pushkin's poems ("Rose," "Flower," "Alas, why does she shine..."). For Blok, the rose becomes a symbol of the Beautiful Lady, unreachable and thorny. For Balmont and Bunin, it is a nostalgic sign of lost love."The Little Prince" by Saint-Exupéry ...
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