Milton's Lycidas: The Tradition and the PoemC. A. Patrides University of Missouri Press, 1983 - 370 páginas |
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Página 90
... paradise : like Milton's it relates flowers to immortality , but much more pictorially , less profoundly . Mil- ton's flowers keep their reality and their relative subordination in fancy and on earth , while Spenser's cheerfully bloom ...
... paradise : like Milton's it relates flowers to immortality , but much more pictorially , less profoundly . Mil- ton's flowers keep their reality and their relative subordination in fancy and on earth , while Spenser's cheerfully bloom ...
Página 203
... Paradise details familiar from Dante , Boccaccio , Ronsard , Marot ; in these as in Spenser or Sannazaro the homogeneity of classical and Chris- tian details is assumed , and Milton had himself assumed it in those Latin elegies whose ...
... Paradise details familiar from Dante , Boccaccio , Ronsard , Marot ; in these as in Spenser or Sannazaro the homogeneity of classical and Chris- tian details is assumed , and Milton had himself assumed it in those Latin elegies whose ...
Página 260
... Paradise Lost , Amaranth after the Fall is removed from Eden to Heaven , where it " grows / And flours aloft shading the Fount of Life " ( 3.357 ) . Its failure to thrive on earth marks the final failure of unconsecrated pastoral in ...
... Paradise Lost , Amaranth after the Fall is removed from Eden to Heaven , where it " grows / And flours aloft shading the Fount of Life " ( 3.357 ) . Its failure to thrive on earth marks the final failure of unconsecrated pastoral in ...
Contenido
Epitaphium Damonis | 14 |
On the Tradition | 31 |
14 | 42 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
allusion answer appears associated beauty become beginning bring called Christian classical close conventional course critical dead death eclogue effect English essay experience expression fact fame feeling figure final flower follows force give heaven human idea imagery images important interpretation John kind King lament language later leaves less lines literary literature look Lost Lycidas meaning metaphor Milton mind mourn move movement Muse nature never once opening Orpheus Paradise passage pastoral elegy pattern perhaps Peter poem poet poetic poetry possible present question reader reference relation rhyme seems sense setting shepherd sing song sound speak speaker speech stream structure Studies suggest swain symbol tear theme Theocritus things thought tion tradition true truth turn University verse Virgil vision voice whole writing