Voice and Crisis: Invocation in Milton's PoetryArchon Books, 1984 - 130 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 19
Página 14
... present celebration , but the poem " acquires , even in its brief compass , the encyclopedic character prescribed by Renaissance critics . as a feature of epic poetry . " Thus , in a sense , Milton comes into his poetic maturity at the ...
... present celebration , but the poem " acquires , even in its brief compass , the encyclopedic character prescribed by Renaissance critics . as a feature of epic poetry . " Thus , in a sense , Milton comes into his poetic maturity at the ...
Página 15
... present tense — a labor secured in emphatically temporal terms in the pivotal eighteenth stanza : And then at last our bliss Full and perfet is , But now begins . . · ( 165-67 ) With these lines , a new confidence carries the poem ...
... present tense — a labor secured in emphatically temporal terms in the pivotal eighteenth stanza : And then at last our bliss Full and perfet is , But now begins . . · ( 165-67 ) With these lines , a new confidence carries the poem ...
Página 91
... present in Satan's speech ( " with no friendly voice " ) ; but Satan , here alone for the first time in the epic drama , presents a weaker version of that self he can project in dialectical discourse or before great audiences . Alone ...
... present in Satan's speech ( " with no friendly voice " ) ; but Satan , here alone for the first time in the epic drama , presents a weaker version of that self he can project in dialectical discourse or before great audiences . Alone ...
Contenido
The Pattern of Invocation in Miltons Poetry | 11 |
Paradise Lost | 45 |
Voice and Crisis | 63 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 3 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Adam appear attempt becomes beginning blind Book Cambridge Christian classical create crisis Criticism dark descent divine early echoes edition enemies English epic example experience express eyes fair Fall father final hast hear heard heart Heav'n holy hope human hymn imagination inspiration invocation invokes John Milton L'Allegro later light living London Lord Lycidas lyric man's Milton mind Muse Nativity nature once opening Orpheus Paradise Lost passage pastoral pattern perhaps poem poet poet's poetic poetry possible praise prayer presence present Psalms reader Regained relation religious remember Return Samson Satan secret seems sense sing song soul spirit story structure Studies thee theme things thou tion tradition Trans transcendent translation triumph true turn ultimate University Press unto verse vision vocation voice York
Referencias a este libro
Remembering and Repeating: Biblical Creation in Paradise Lost Regina M. Schwartz Vista previa limitada - 1988 |
From the Temple to the Castle: An Architectural History of British ... Lee Morrissey Vista previa limitada - 1999 |