John Milton: A Reader's Guide to His PoetryPresents close analyses of the seventeenth-century poet's literary works, focusing on his use of classical and Biblical allusions |
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Página 335
Certainly in the scenes dealing with power and glory , Satan suggests that Christ
might be accused of Sloth , and he makes many attempts to arouse him to both
Anger and Envy . But why then Belial's suggestion and Satan's reply , unless ...
Certainly in the scenes dealing with power and glory , Satan suggests that Christ
might be accused of Sloth , and he makes many attempts to arouse him to both
Anger and Envy . But why then Belial's suggestion and Satan's reply , unless ...
Página 343
If I seem impatient with the tendency to read Milton's position into Christ's speech
it is in part because such argument makes us forget that Christ is a speaker in a
poem , and that he is saying what he ought to have said , and undoubtedly would
...
If I seem impatient with the tendency to read Milton's position into Christ's speech
it is in part because such argument makes us forget that Christ is a speaker in a
poem , and that he is saying what he ought to have said , and undoubtedly would
...
Página 346
A dark and troubled night indeed , which would have proved to another than
Christ " the dark night of the soul , ” Satan had hoped to produce . Yet through it ,
as Satan himself says , Christ remained “ unappalled in calm and sinless peace .
A dark and troubled night indeed , which would have proved to another than
Christ " the dark night of the soul , ” Satan had hoped to produce . Yet through it ,
as Satan himself says , Christ remained “ unappalled in calm and sinless peace .
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Contenido
The Education of a Poet | 3 |
Juvenilia | 22 |
The Minor Poems | 50 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 16 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
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