Reading Paradise LostIndiana University Press, 1980 - 262 páginas |
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... critics have finally become so concerned with the historical record that they are likely to be more interested in it than in the poetry it was meant to explain . The corrective trend to this mountain of historical research has been the ...
... critics have finally become so concerned with the historical record that they are likely to be more interested in it than in the poetry it was meant to explain . The corrective trend to this mountain of historical research has been the ...
Página 8
... critic thinks Milton's " fit audience " would have responded , he is exhorted to correct himself . For example , B. Rajan , worried like many critics that modern readers may respond favorably to Satan , argues from the climate of the ...
... critic thinks Milton's " fit audience " would have responded , he is exhorted to correct himself . For example , B. Rajan , worried like many critics that modern readers may respond favorably to Satan , argues from the climate of the ...
Página 21
... critics accept . There is a danger , however , in criticism that flattens a work of art into its " meaning " without examining how that meaning comes about . Although no one would accept a statement like " the Fall was , perhaps ...
... critics accept . There is a danger , however , in criticism that flattens a work of art into its " meaning " without examining how that meaning comes about . Although no one would accept a statement like " the Fall was , perhaps ...
Contenido
Miltons Great Oxymoron Books III 19 | 60 |
Points of View in Paradise Books IVV | 85 |
Unfallen Narration Books VVI | 118 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Abdiel Adam and Eve Adam's Aeneid Areopagitica audience begins Belial Bible biblical Books XI Christian Christian Doctrine comic Creation criticism darkness death divine dramatic Earth effect entire eternal Eve's evil experience eyes F.R. Leavis fact faith Fall fallen angels Father feel fiction Fish fruit Genesis God's words grace Guillaume Du Bartas Heaven Hell hero heroic human Hymn imagine innocence interpretation John Milton light lines look man's mankind meaning Michael Milton's God Milton's narrator Milton's poem mind muse narrative narrator's omnipotent Pandaemonium paradoxes poem's poet poetic poetry point of view prologue reader reading Paradise Lost repent response role salvation Satan says scene seems sense Serpent simply song speak speech spirit Stanley Fish Stephen Booth suggests tell thee things thir thou tion tragic true truth understand unfallen University Press vision War in Heaven warning Wayne Booth Yale Milton