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 52
The opening lines of the First Prolusion are a deliberate burlesque on classical
models which Cambridge undergraduates were required to imitate . Modern
students can share the fun Mr. Tillyard evokes as he analyzes the . prologue to ...
The opening lines of the First Prolusion are a deliberate burlesque on classical
models which Cambridge undergraduates were required to imitate . Modern
students can share the fun Mr. Tillyard evokes as he analyzes the . prologue to ...
Página 107
Rising before daylight , together " ere the high lawns appeared under the
opening eyelids of the morn , ” they “ drove afield " until high noon , then into the
afternoon and often far into the night , studying while others slept or sported with
...
Rising before daylight , together " ere the high lawns appeared under the
opening eyelids of the morn , ” they “ drove afield " until high noon , then into the
afternoon and often far into the night , studying while others slept or sported with
...
Página 362
( 837-40 ) Her opening gambits having failed , Dalilah attempts another . The
magistrates had insisted that her duty was to the state , " to entrap a common
enemy ” of her people . “ And the Priest was not behind , but ever at my ear . ” For
the first ...
( 837-40 ) Her opening gambits having failed , Dalilah attempts another . The
magistrates had insisted that her duty was to the state , " to entrap a common
enemy ” of her people . “ And the Priest was not behind , but ever at my ear . ” For
the first ...
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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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