Reading Paradise Lost |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 40
Página 8
In effect the poem begins by putting the reader in a large hole that only the rest of
the poem can pull him out of . ... Amazingly , for a poem whose basic plot is
known before we begin reading , Paradise Lost is consistently able to bewilder
and ...
In effect the poem begins by putting the reader in a large hole that only the rest of
the poem can pull him out of . ... Amazingly , for a poem whose basic plot is
known before we begin reading , Paradise Lost is consistently able to bewilder
and ...
Página 22
( I , 1 - 16 ) * The poem ' s propensity for confusing its reader begins with the
opening lines , a “ prologue ” as famous and ... create a breathless sense of
energy and motion that is the best possible proof of their claim to begin
something greater ...
( I , 1 - 16 ) * The poem ' s propensity for confusing its reader begins with the
opening lines , a “ prologue ” as famous and ... create a breathless sense of
energy and motion that is the best possible proof of their claim to begin
something greater ...
Página 124
The battle begins promisingly enough , as God sends an army of loyal angels
equal in number to the rebel force to drive Satan out of Heaven . Spirits who can '
t die , though they can ( and do ) feel pain , perform numberless heroic deeds ...
The battle begins promisingly enough , as God sends an army of loyal angels
equal in number to the rebel force to drive Satan out of Heaven . Spirits who can '
t die , though they can ( and do ) feel pain , perform numberless heroic deeds ...
Comentarios de la gente - Escribir un comentario
No encontramos ningún comentario en los lugares habituales.
Contenido
Reading and Criticism | 1 |
Light Invisible Book III | 118 |
True Fiction Books VIIVIII | 136 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 5 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Adam and Eve Adam's already angels answer apparent asks audience become begins believe Bible Book Christian comes course created Creation criticism curse darkness death divine doctrine Earth Eden effect entire epic Eve's evil example expect experience eyes fact faith Fall fallen Father feel fiction final follows fruit give God's hand Heaven Hell human imagine interpretation kind knowledge least less light lines live look man's mankind matter meaning merely Michael Milton mind narrator nature never once Paradise Lost perhaps poem poem's poet point of view Press question Raphael's reader reason response Satan says scene seems sense simply speak speech spirit story suggests tell thee things thir thou thought tragic true truth turn understand University vision voice whole