Milton and the MusesUniversity of Alabama Press, 1989 - 174 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 47
Página 4
... materials out of which he builds these passages are as traditional as one could wish , but their effect is not to make the reader think of Du Bartas , Spenser , Tasso , Prudentius , or anyone else . Rather , they rivet his attention on ...
... materials out of which he builds these passages are as traditional as one could wish , but their effect is not to make the reader think of Du Bartas , Spenser , Tasso , Prudentius , or anyone else . Rather , they rivet his attention on ...
Página 59
... materials that Milton created a meaning for the Camenae eminently ap- propriate to the passages in which he used them . Appreciation of what he had done , in his own day as now , depended on a steeping in the same materials he had ...
... materials that Milton created a meaning for the Camenae eminently ap- propriate to the passages in which he used them . Appreciation of what he had done , in his own day as now , depended on a steeping in the same materials he had ...
Página 75
... materials they use or discard , create their tradition as well as inheriting it . The knowledge that this is so dispenses with the blind reverence for tradition as a reified entity that literary scholars sometimes dis- played in the ...
... materials they use or discard , create their tradition as well as inheriting it . The knowledge that this is so dispenses with the blind reverence for tradition as a reified entity that literary scholars sometimes dis- played in the ...
Contenido
Tradition and the Individual Talent | 1 |
The Tender Stops of Various Quills | 13 |
The Mellowing Year | 44 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 3 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
achieve appeared artistic association authors begin blindness called Cambridge Camenae Christian classical Clio Collected Complete composition course critics divine earlier early Edited efforts Elegy English epic example experience expressed fact fame father felt figures give given glory grammar Greek hand Harvard University Press indicates inspiration John John Milton kind language later Latin learned least less letter Library light lines literature Lives London Mass materials matter meaning Milton mind musae Muse Nativity Ode nature notes original Oxford Paradise Lost passage perhaps phrase poem poet poetic poetry practice present reference relation Renaissance sense song Spenser suggests taught teaching things Thomas thought tion tradition trans translation true truth turned understanding University Press Urania verse writing written wrote York