Milton Criticism: Selections from Four CenturiesJames Thorpe Collier Books, 1969 - 376 páginas |
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Página 19
... effect on the course of Milton criticism . A good deal has been done toward discrediting clichés as current crit- icism ( such as the organ music , planetary circlings , the grand style , and so forth ) ; and the effects of the verse ...
... effect on the course of Milton criticism . A good deal has been done toward discrediting clichés as current crit- icism ( such as the organ music , planetary circlings , the grand style , and so forth ) ; and the effects of the verse ...
Página 230
... effect in form . And if the effect in this case is an effect of prose formlessness , and if nevertheless it is deliberate , we had better ask ourselves what Milton wanted with it . . . . 1 1 1 Milton was not enamored of the ten lines ...
... effect in form . And if the effect in this case is an effect of prose formlessness , and if nevertheless it is deliberate , we had better ask ourselves what Milton wanted with it . . . . 1 1 1 Milton was not enamored of the ten lines ...
Página 234
... effect ; it is much more Virgilian , too , than the later effect which Milton has in the lines of the Paradise Lost , where the great departure from the epical substance of the Virgil makes it needful to depart from the poetic tone ...
... effect ; it is much more Virgilian , too , than the later effect which Milton has in the lines of the Paradise Lost , where the great departure from the epical substance of the Virgil makes it needful to depart from the poetic tone ...
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