John Milton, Poet and HumanistPress of Western Reserve University, 1966 - 286 páginas |
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Página 14
... influences I have barely indi- cated . To trace them in detail would be beyond my purpose . The point to observe is that ... influence is , as we have seen , definitely trace- able in his maturest work . It remains to consider a set of ...
... influences I have barely indi- cated . To trace them in detail would be beyond my purpose . The point to observe is that ... influence is , as we have seen , definitely trace- able in his maturest work . It remains to consider a set of ...
Página 49
... influence in anything written before the Horton period . In a poet as susceptible of literary influence as Milton has shown himself to be , this would be strange indeed if he had already been profoundly stirred by the enthusiasm which ...
... influence in anything written before the Horton period . In a poet as susceptible of literary influence as Milton has shown himself to be , this would be strange indeed if he had already been profoundly stirred by the enthusiasm which ...
Página 147
... influence on Milton's Lycidas . The practice of making the eclogue a vehicle for didacticism and personal allegory , thus inaugurated by Petrarch and Boccac- cio , characterizes in a varying degree the work of their successors in the ...
... influence on Milton's Lycidas . The practice of making the eclogue a vehicle for didacticism and personal allegory , thus inaugurated by Petrarch and Boccac- cio , characterizes in a varying degree the work of their successors in the ...
Contenido
The Youth of Milton | 1 |
Milton and the Art of | 161 |
6 The Dramatic Element in Paradise Lost | 208 |
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actual Adam already appears authors beauty beginning belong century character Christ Christian classical close Commonplace Book course criticism death drama earlier early eclogue edition effect elaborate elegy element Elizabethan emotional English entries epic essential evidence experience expression fact feel final give Group hand Holinshed Horton human idea ideal imagination important influence interest interpretation Italian Italy kind knowledge lament later Latin less lines literary Lycidas material means military Milton mind moral motive nature observation original Paradise Lost passage passion pastoral period poem poet poetic poetry possible practice present probably references regarding relation remains Renaissance represented result Samson sense significance Smectymnuus Spenser spirit statement suggest temptation theme things thou thought tion tradition true University verse Virgil whole writing written youth