Milton Re-viewed: Ten EssaysRoutledge, 2019 M01 3 - 160 páginas First published in 1991. These ten essays by the distinguished Milton scholar Edward Le Comte examines the various themes, context and structure of Milton’s poetry and prose, including particular focus on both Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained. This title will be of great interest to students of John Milton and English Literature. |
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... modern reader. Angels fighting angels, with whatever weapons—swords, cannonballs, mountains? We no longer find war exhilarating. Nor do we believe in the materiality of angels. The heavy concentration of Latin vocabulary is also ...
... modern reader. Angels fighting angels, with whatever weapons—swords, cannonballs, mountains? We no longer find war exhilarating. Nor do we believe in the materiality of angels. The heavy concentration of Latin vocabulary is also ...
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... modern hexaemeral studies, Stella Revard produced (after twenty years) The War in Heaven: “Paradise Lost” and the Tradition of Satan's Rebellion, which reviews Daemonomachiae or Angeleida in Renaissance authors who range alphabetically ...
... modern hexaemeral studies, Stella Revard produced (after twenty years) The War in Heaven: “Paradise Lost” and the Tradition of Satan's Rebellion, which reviews Daemonomachiae or Angeleida in Renaissance authors who range alphabetically ...
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... modern literary virtue is irony, and now Milton turns out to have it, along with a sense of humor previously denied. In the words of Stanley Fish, one of Stein's converts, “Miltonic humour is never side-splitting, but [now] there is ...
... modern literary virtue is irony, and now Milton turns out to have it, along with a sense of humor previously denied. In the words of Stanley Fish, one of Stein's converts, “Miltonic humour is never side-splitting, but [now] there is ...
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... modern response” being “due to the lapse in time since the period of its composition, and a change of viewpoint which a knowledge of his era and his specifically baroque aims may help to dispel” (p. 121). Where Fowler declares the war ...
... modern response” being “due to the lapse in time since the period of its composition, and a change of viewpoint which a knowledge of his era and his specifically baroque aims may help to dispel” (p. 121). Where Fowler declares the war ...
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... modern criticism, Milton, being a materialist, whose angels digest and blush and make love—as well as bleed—aimed for solidity on the heavenly battlefield too. He had little taste for symbolism, denying it even to the Song of Solomon ...
... modern criticism, Milton, being a materialist, whose angels digest and blush and make love—as well as bleed—aimed for solidity on the heavenly battlefield too. He had little taste for symbolism, denying it even to the Song of Solomon ...
Contenido
What Douglas Bush Stood | |
Satans Heresies in Paradise Regained | |
The Meaning Lurking in the Contexts of | |
Ambiguous Milton | |
The Parameters | |
Miltonic Echoes in Elegia VII | |
Justa Edovardo King | |
Authorial Revision | |
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allusion ambiguity angels Areopagitica Bush’s Cambridge Carey century Christ Christian Christopher Hill Columbia University Press commentators Comte Comus Concordance conjectures critics devil Diodati divine Douglas Bush edition editor Edward Elegia VII Emilia English Literature English Poetry epic essay Euripides father Fletcher gives God’s Greek heav’n Heaven heresy Homer Iliad Index Jesus John Milton Justa King King’s L’Allegro Lady later Latin Library literary Lycidas Macmillan meaning Milton Encyclopedia Milton London Milton New York Milton Quarterly Milton Studies Milton’s Poetry mind modern Orpheus Ovid Ovid’s Oxford University Press Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parker parody Patterson poem poet poet’s Poetical praise prose published puns quotation quoted reader reference Renaissance Rowse Samson Agonistes Satan scholars Shakespeare Shawcross Simon Forman Sonnets Student’s Milton T.S. Eliot thou Tradition translation Variorum Commentary Verbal verse VIII Virgil volume William Woodhouse word wrote Yale