Structure in Milton's Poetry: from the Foundation to the PinnaclesMilton's skill in constructing poems whose structure is determined, not by rule or precedent, but by the thought to be expressed, is one of his chief accomplishments as a creative artist. Professor Condee analyzes seventeen of Milton's poems, both early and late, well and badly organized, in order to trace the poet's developing ability to create increasingly complex poetic structures. Three aspects of Milton's use of poetic structure are stressed: the relation of the parts to the whole and parts to parts, his ability to unite actual events with the poetic situation, and his use and variation of literary tradition to establish the desired structural unity. |
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The vision has its origin not only in the fact that Lycidas is dead , but in the nature of the poem itself — its images of fertility and resurrection , its developing patterns of feeling , its prosody , the peculiar nature of the two ...
The vision has its origin not only in the fact that Lycidas is dead , but in the nature of the poem itself — its images of fertility and resurrection , its developing patterns of feeling , its prosody , the peculiar nature of the two ...
Two other reasons for this coolness are the nature of the style and the nature of the action . The vocabulary , the imagery , and the sentence - structure of Paradise Regained are far 153 Paradise Regained as the Transcendence over the ...
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Inhoudsopgave
Miltons Poetical Architecture | 1 |
The Early Latin Poems and Lycidas | 21 |
The Fair Infant Elegia Quinta | 43 |
Copyright | |
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