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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Rather , for reasons we cannot know , Milton has temporarily turned away from poems like " Elegia Tertia , " which attempt a developmental or progressive structure , to write a poem like the Nativity Ode , which is meticulously and ...
9 During the spring or summer of 1634 , perhaps two years after the writing of the Companion Pieces and three years before “ Lycidas , " Milton turned to the writing of Comus , which was the longest and most complex poem he had so far ...
In those youthful days , the rusticated undergraduate Milton turned not only to poetry to come to terms with his rustication , but to the literary tradition of Ovid and his exile - poems . So Milton turned his Ovid upsidedown and wrote ...
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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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