Milton: Comus and Samson Agonistes : a CasebookJulian Lovelock Macmillan, 1975 - 253 pagina's |
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Pagina 61
... interpretation has been very generally accepted , but I do not think that Milton's allusion is to Paradise , or ( at least in Professor Hanford's sense ) to the rewards and compensations of the chaste soul hereafter . The whole deeper ...
... interpretation has been very generally accepted , but I do not think that Milton's allusion is to Paradise , or ( at least in Professor Hanford's sense ) to the rewards and compensations of the chaste soul hereafter . The whole deeper ...
Pagina 64
... interpretations current when he wrote . Be this as it may , Milton's meaning is something quite different from that which I have been bold enough to attribute to Spenser , and resembles the interpretation of the myth given by Boccaccio ...
... interpretations current when he wrote . Be this as it may , Milton's meaning is something quite different from that which I have been bold enough to attribute to Spenser , and resembles the interpretation of the myth given by Boccaccio ...
Pagina 230
... interpretation which he himself has faced remain unresolved . It just isn't that easy , although everyone in the play wishes it were . After all , didn't the Law prohibit Samson's marriage ? One won- ders if Samson has learned anything ...
... interpretation which he himself has faced remain unresolved . It just isn't that easy , although everyone in the play wishes it were . After all , didn't the Law prohibit Samson's marriage ? One won- ders if Samson has learned anything ...
Inhoudsopgave
Acknowledgements | 7 |
Introduction | 13 |
Early Criticism | 21 |
Copyright | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
accept action Aeschylus answer appears argument beauty becomes begin Brother called cause characters chastity Chorus Christian classical close comes Comus concern course critics Dalila darkness death divine doctrine doubt drama effect English evil experience expressed fact faith feel final follow give grace Greek Greek tragedy hand hath hear heaven hope human idea ideal imagination interpretation Italy kind Lady least less light lines live Manoa masque meaning Milton mind moral move nature never once Paradise Lost perhaps person play poem poet poetry present question reader reading reason reference relation religious response Samson Agonistes scene seems seen sense song soul SOURCE speech Spenser Spirit stage strength suggestion sure symbol temperance things thou thought tragedy true understanding University virginity virtue whole