Milton's Poetry of Choice and Its Romantic HeirsCornell University Press, 1973 - 335 páginas |
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Página 72
... relationship of the line " To pray , repent , and bring obedience due " to the line " To Prayer , repentance and obedience due " is the harmonious relationship of man to God . The first pre- sents man offering three things ; the second ...
... relationship of the line " To pray , repent , and bring obedience due " to the line " To Prayer , repentance and obedience due " is the harmonious relationship of man to God . The first pre- sents man offering three things ; the second ...
Página 100
... relationship to death is at least bound to Keats's relationship with Milton . The stanza most in love with easeful death opens with the phrase " Darkling I listen , " identifying in word and stance Keats's relationship to the bird with ...
... relationship to death is at least bound to Keats's relationship with Milton . The stanza most in love with easeful death opens with the phrase " Darkling I listen , " identifying in word and stance Keats's relationship to the bird with ...
Página 109
... relationship is put on with the power - indeed , this knowledge is the power : Tell me why thus I rave , about these groves ! Mute thou remainest - Mute ! yet I can read A wondrous lesson in thy silent face : Knowledge enormous makes a ...
... relationship is put on with the power - indeed , this knowledge is the power : Tell me why thus I rave , about these groves ! Mute thou remainest - Mute ! yet I can read A wondrous lesson in thy silent face : Knowledge enormous makes a ...
Contenido
Foreword | 1 |
A Moments Space | 55 |
A Space Extended | 111 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
abstraction abyss Adam Adam's alternatives angels arrest awareness Blake capture comes Comus confrontation consciousness create creation creative death distance divine dream earth echo emblem epic eternal Eve's experience expression fall fallen false surmise Faust fiction Geoffrey Hartman God's Harold Bloom heaven human Il Penseroso imaginative Keats Kierkegaard L'Allegro literary loss Lycidas ment metaphor Milton mind moral muse narrative nature ness Northrop Frye numbers Ode to Duty opening option Orpheus Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage past pause Penseroso phrase poem poet poet's poetic voice poetry of choice Prelude present prophetic reader redemption relation relationship repetition revision romantic Satan seems self-consciousness sense Shelley Shelley's silence sing song sonnet space stand stasis T. S. Eliot takes temporal temptation thee things thir thou tion turn Urizen verse vision W. H. Auden Wallace Stevens word Wordsworth