John Milton: A Reader's Guide to His PoetryFarrar, Straus, 1963 - 385 páginas |
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Página 52
... opening lines of the First Prolusion are a deliberate burlesque on classical models which Cambridge undergraduates were required to imitate . Modern stu- dents can share the fun Mr. Tillyard evokes as he analyzes the prologue to L ...
... opening lines of the First Prolusion are a deliberate burlesque on classical models which Cambridge undergraduates were required to imitate . Modern stu- dents can share the fun Mr. Tillyard evokes as he analyzes the prologue to L ...
Página 177
... opening of Parliament . The plot was detected just in time . By or- der of Parliament , the day was to be forever memorialized by Eng- land . The universities always held formal exercises which , at Cam- bridge , had produced such poems ...
... opening of Parliament . The plot was detected just in time . By or- der of Parliament , the day was to be forever memorialized by Eng- land . The universities always held formal exercises which , at Cam- bridge , had produced such poems ...
Página 221
... opening lines , or was it coeternal with Deity , since God is light ? We know from Genesis that light existed " before the sun , Before the Heavens . " Sun and moon were not created until the fourth day , while light was there on the ...
... opening lines , or was it coeternal with Deity , since God is light ? We know from Genesis that light existed " before the sun , Before the Heavens . " Sun and moon were not created until the fourth day , while light was there on the ...
Contenido
The Education of a Poet | 3 |
Juvenilia | 22 |
The Minor Poems | 50 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Adam and Eve Adam's Aeneid appear Areopagitica basic begins Belial Biblical blind Book called Cambridge Chorus Christ Christian Church classical climax Comus Creation critics Dalilah dark death deliberately Diodati drama earth echoes Edward Phillips elegy English epic Eve's eyes fallen angels familiar father feel Genesis God's Greek hath hear Heaven Hell Horton Il Penseroso implied Italian John Milton King L'Allegro Lady Latin Lawes learned light lines living Ludlow Castle Lycidas masque Milton wrote mind modern Moloch mood Muse Nativity Ode Nature pagan Paradise Lost Paradise Regained paraphrase particularly passage Penseroso phrase Pindar poem poet poetry Prologue Psalms Puritan Raphael reader Reason Renaissance rhyme Samson Agonistes Satan says scene seems sestet shepherd sing song sonnet sound speech Spenser Spirit stanza style suggested temptation thee theme thou Tillyard tion tradition verse word write written young youth