John Milton: A Reader's Guide to His Poetry |
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Página viii
Mr . Eliot was saying in effect that the language of poetry should be less far
removed from the language of prose , that it should be more conversational and
employ more of the language of everyday , as Dryden in his time and the authors
of the ...
Mr . Eliot was saying in effect that the language of poetry should be less far
removed from the language of prose , that it should be more conversational and
employ more of the language of everyday , as Dryden in his time and the authors
of the ...
Página xi
Indeed , so far as vocabulary is concerned , the language of the early poems is
often as “ conversational ” as even T . S . Eliot could desire . So too is much of the
language of Paradise Regained . The difficulty modern readers may find at first ...
Indeed , so far as vocabulary is concerned , the language of the early poems is
often as “ conversational ” as even T . S . Eliot could desire . So too is much of the
language of Paradise Regained . The difficulty modern readers may find at first ...
Página 27
But we can understand the address to his “ native language , ” which must have
surprised the dons and students of Cambridge , since it is a much more personal
expression than they would have expected to hear . “ Here I salute thee , ” Milton
...
But we can understand the address to his “ native language , ” which must have
surprised the dons and students of Cambridge , since it is a much more personal
expression than they would have expected to hear . “ Here I salute thee , ” Milton
...
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Contenido
The Education of a Poet | 3 |
Juvenilia | 22 |
The Minor Poems | 50 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
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