Milton's Lycidas: The Tradition and the Poem |
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Página 199
blossoming ( promise of fruit , not fruit ) , but equally feeling the necessity of giving over to death these ... It is also indubitable that part of the valid sense of assuagement which human beings feel in symbolic actions that ...
blossoming ( promise of fruit , not fruit ) , but equally feeling the necessity of giving over to death these ... It is also indubitable that part of the valid sense of assuagement which human beings feel in symbolic actions that ...
Página 219
Milton , Tillyard maintains , expresses his own situation and feelings and attitudes , not only in the obviously allegorical passages about driving afield and piping with Lycidas , or in the passages on fame and the corrupt clergy which ...
Milton , Tillyard maintains , expresses his own situation and feelings and attitudes , not only in the obviously allegorical passages about driving afield and piping with Lycidas , or in the passages on fame and the corrupt clergy which ...
Página 226
Tillyard is surely right , as against Ransom ( and earlier , Dr. Johnson ) , in finding deep feeling in the poem , but he confronts us with the spurious alternative that the feeling must be either about King or about Milton himself .
Tillyard is surely right , as against Ransom ( and earlier , Dr. Johnson ) , in finding deep feeling in the poem , but he confronts us with the spurious alternative that the feeling must be either about King or about Milton himself .
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Contenido
Epitaphium Damonis | 14 |
On the Tradition | 31 |
On the Poem | 60 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
allusion answer appears associated beauty become beginning bring called Christian classical close conventional course critical dead death eclogue effect English essay experience expression fact fame feeling figure final flower follows force give heaven human imagery images important interpretation Italian John kind King lament language later leaves less lines literary look Lost Lycidas meaning metaphor Milton mind mourn move movement Muse nature never once opening Orpheus Paradise passage pastoral elegy pattern perhaps Peter poem poet poetic poetry possible present question reader reference relation rhyme seems sense setting shepherd simply sing song sound speak speaker speech stream structure Studies suggest swain symbol tear theme Theocritus things thought tion tradition true truth turn University verse Virgil vision voice whole writing