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 61
Within the four - stressed lines of the two poems , there is a wealth of metrical
diversity . The normal octosyllabic line is an iambic of eight syllables : To live with
her , and live with thee , In unreproved pleasures free . ( L'All . 39-40 ) but ...
Within the four - stressed lines of the two poems , there is a wealth of metrical
diversity . The normal octosyllabic line is an iambic of eight syllables : To live with
her , and live with thee , In unreproved pleasures free . ( L'All . 39-40 ) but ...
Página 62
After discussing the high percentage of seven - syllable lines ( catalectic trochaic
lines ) , Mr. Sprott considers Professor Tillyard's theory that the poems had their
origin in Milton's academic exercise , and that they were written while he was still
...
After discussing the high percentage of seven - syllable lines ( catalectic trochaic
lines ) , Mr. Sprott considers Professor Tillyard's theory that the poems had their
origin in Milton's academic exercise , and that they were written while he was still
...
Página 103
There are eleven of these , in length from ten to thirty - one lines . Some lines
rhyme , but in no regular pattern . Ten lines , scattered at irregular intervals , do
not rhyme at all . The metre is basically iambic pentameter , but fourteen lines are
...
There are eleven of these , in length from ten to thirty - one lines . Some lines
rhyme , but in no regular pattern . Ten lines , scattered at irregular intervals , do
not rhyme at all . The metre is basically iambic pentameter , but fourteen lines are
...
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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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