Milton Criticism: Selections from Four CenturiesJames Thorpe Collier Books, 1969 - 376 páginas |
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Página 87
... Blank verse , said an ingenious critick , seems to be verse only to the eye . Poetry may subsist without rhyme , but English poetry will not often please ; nor can rhyme ever be safely spared but where the subject is able to support ...
... Blank verse , said an ingenious critick , seems to be verse only to the eye . Poetry may subsist without rhyme , but English poetry will not often please ; nor can rhyme ever be safely spared but where the subject is able to support ...
Página 115
... poem . To us blank verse seems the natural metre for a long serious poem . Before Milton's day , except in the drama , it had only once been so employed - in an Eliza- bethan poem of no mark or likelihood , called A Tale of Two Swannes ...
... poem . To us blank verse seems the natural metre for a long serious poem . Before Milton's day , except in the drama , it had only once been so employed - in an Eliza- bethan poem of no mark or likelihood , called A Tale of Two Swannes ...
Página 119
... blank verse , and made of it a worthy epic metre . In a long poem variety is indispensable , and he preserved the utmost freedom in some respects . He continually varies the stresses in the line , their number , their weight , and their ...
... blank verse , and made of it a worthy epic metre . In a long poem variety is indispensable , and he preserved the utmost freedom in some respects . He continually varies the stresses in the line , their number , their weight , and their ...
Contenido
Joseph Addison six Spectator PAPERS ON Paradise Lost | 23 |
Jonathan Richardson EXPLANATORY NOTES AND REMARKS | 54 |
Samuel Johnson MILTON 1779 | 65 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
action Adam and Eve admiration Aeneid ancient angels Areopagitica Aristotle beauty believe blank verse Book called character Christ Christian Christian humanism Comus conscious Dante death diction dise Lost divine drama earth eighteenth century English poet English poetry essay evil expression fable fall feel genius give Greek happiness Heaven Hell hero Homer human Ibid ideas Iliad images imagination John Milton language Latin learning less lines Lycidas mankind meaning ment Milton criticism Milton's thought Milton's verse mind modern moral nature never Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained particular passage passion perfect perhaps persons philosophy phrase poet poet's poetic poetry praise prose Puritan reader reason Renaissance rhyme rhythm Samson Samson Agonistes Satan seems sense sentiments Shakespeare speaks speech Spenser spirit stanza story sublime thee theme things thou tion ton's true truth Virgil virtue whole words writing