PARADISE LOST1962 |
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Página 48
... Ovidian phrase plainly match Ovid's description of Scylla , the lovely nymph whose body Circe transformed into a mass of yelping hounds from the waist down ( Met . XIV , 40-74 ) . Finally - according to Ovid - she became the dangerous ...
... Ovidian phrase plainly match Ovid's description of Scylla , the lovely nymph whose body Circe transformed into a mass of yelping hounds from the waist down ( Met . XIV , 40-74 ) . Finally - according to Ovid - she became the dangerous ...
Página 120
... Ovid describes ( Met . XV , 391-407 ) as immo- lating itself once in five hundred years on a pyre of spices , only to " carry its own cradle and its father's tomb to the city of the sun . " Ovid's city of the sun , Heliopolis , becomes ...
... Ovid describes ( Met . XV , 391-407 ) as immo- lating itself once in five hundred years on a pyre of spices , only to " carry its own cradle and its father's tomb to the city of the sun . " Ovid's city of the sun , Heliopolis , becomes ...
Página 285
... Ovid's story was a foil and ( it may be added ) a corrobora- tion for the biblical account . 738. Milton could count on his readers to remember that in Ovid's account of Deucalion's flood ( Met . I , 264 ) , when Jove prepared vengeance ...
... Ovid's story was a foil and ( it may be added ) a corrobora- tion for the biblical account . 738. Milton could count on his readers to remember that in Ovid's account of Deucalion's flood ( Met . I , 264 ) , when Jove prepared vengeance ...
Contenido
Preface | vii |
Abbreviations of Titles of Periodicals Cited in the Notes | xiv |
Bibliography of Books Dealing Mainly with Paradise Lost | li |
Derechos de autor | |
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Paradise Lost: A Poem in Twelve Books John Milton,Merritt Yerkes Hughes Sin vista previa disponible - 2003 |
Términos y frases comunes
Adam Adam and Eve Adam's Aeneid angels appear'd Areopagitica battle in heaven Beast Beelzebub behold Belial bliss Book bright C. S. Lewis C.Ed call'd Canaan Celestial Chaos Chariot cloud Comus creation Creatures dark Death devils Divine Du Bartas Earth Eternal Ev'ning evil eyes fair Faith fall Father fire Flow'rs Fruit Gate Genesis glory God's Gods grace ground happy hath Heav'n heav'nly Hell highth Hill human John Milton keeps its Latin King Latin Latin meaning light live Lord Lucifer Nature Night Ovid pain Paradise Lost passage poem Psalm rais'd Raphael Reign repli'd return'd Sapience Satan says seem'd Serpent shalt sight soon spake Spirit stars stood sweet taste thee thence things thir thought Throne tradition Tree turn'd VIII virtue wings words World Zeus