Milton Criticism: Selections from Four CenturiesJames Thorpe Rinehart, 1950 - 376 páginas This book is an invitation to the reading of Milton. The major portion of the volumes consists of sixteen extended essays and studies from the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries." -- Preface. |
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Página 203
... better state of things than this world provides : all the idealism of his youth is concentrated in that amazing description . Conscious and unconscious are at one in it . But when Milton attempts to introduce people into the picture ...
... better state of things than this world provides : all the idealism of his youth is concentrated in that amazing description . Conscious and unconscious are at one in it . But when Milton attempts to introduce people into the picture ...
Página 204
... better than an unregenerate state of sin . On the contrary , we feel that Milton , stranded in his own Paradise , would very soon have eaten the apple on his own responsibility and immediately justified the act in a polemical pamphlet ...
... better than an unregenerate state of sin . On the contrary , we feel that Milton , stranded in his own Paradise , would very soon have eaten the apple on his own responsibility and immediately justified the act in a polemical pamphlet ...
Página 311
... better , certainly , if he is not wholly destitute of scholarship ; and the criticism of the scholar will be all the better if he has some experience of the difficulties of writing verse . But the orientation of the two critics is ...
... better , certainly , if he is not wholly destitute of scholarship ; and the criticism of the scholar will be all the better if he has some experience of the difficulties of writing verse . But the orientation of the two critics is ...
Contenido
3 | 3 |
Joseph Addison SIX Spectator PAPERS ON Paradise Lost | 23 |
Jonathan Richardson EXPLANATORY NOTES AND REMARKS | 54 |
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