Things Unattempted: A Study of MiltonHumanities Press, 1983 - 154 pagina's |
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Pagina 6
... describing ' things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme . ' The poem is primarily addressed to the seventeeth century reader . Very often Milton goes to classical myths and these give to the poem a certain antiquity and remoteness . At ...
... describing ' things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme . ' The poem is primarily addressed to the seventeeth century reader . Very often Milton goes to classical myths and these give to the poem a certain antiquity and remoteness . At ...
Pagina 53
... describing ' what cannot be described , the agency of spirits . " But the fact is ' though Milton was describing the indescribable , he was not describing the undescribed.'5 Milton uses his visual memory in recording every thing he has ...
... describing ' what cannot be described , the agency of spirits . " But the fact is ' though Milton was describing the indescribable , he was not describing the undescribed.'5 Milton uses his visual memory in recording every thing he has ...
Pagina 59
... describing great deeds of warfare . So Milton takes the opportunity of introducing the conventional type of warfare in Heaven . As the epic opens we see Satan and his followers in Hell wallowing in distress and arraigning God's justice ...
... describing great deeds of warfare . So Milton takes the opportunity of introducing the conventional type of warfare in Heaven . As the epic opens we see Satan and his followers in Hell wallowing in distress and arraigning God's justice ...
Inhoudsopgave
Milton And The Sublime | 1 |
Lyric Harmonies | 10 |
Ibid p 140 | 11 |
Copyright | |
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accept action Adam and Eve angels appeal argument beautiful becomes bliss Book brings chastity chooses Christ Christian close comes Comus concept considered conventional created deals death deeds described descriptive divine doubt Edward epic episodes especially evil experience expressed faith fall feels fight figure finally followers forces given gives glory God's grace Heaven Hell hero heroic heroism human images interest introduced Italy justice King knowledge Krishna Lady leaves lines Lord Lycidas Mahabharata mean Milton mind moving nature obedience Pandavas Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passion peace person picture play pleasure poem poet poetry presents question reader realises reason refers religious Samson Agonistes Satan says seems sense shows Son of God spiritual stand suffering suggesting takes tells temptation thee things thinks thou thought tradition tragedy true understand universal virtue wisdom writing