Milton and the MusesUniversity of Alabama Press, 1989 - 174 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 9
Página 1
... original poet , and nothing we can call by a name in him but can be named in another ; he differs from everyone , and in everything does what others had done . The final ac- complishments are more mature and profound than experi- ment ...
... original poet , and nothing we can call by a name in him but can be named in another ; he differs from everyone , and in everything does what others had done . The final ac- complishments are more mature and profound than experi- ment ...
Página 50
... but only if they are studied against the background of his education . In order to understand the subtle and original meaning that informs all his allusions to these deities , we need to understand 50 Milton and the Muses.
... but only if they are studied against the background of his education . In order to understand the subtle and original meaning that informs all his allusions to these deities , we need to understand 50 Milton and the Muses.
Página 125
... original a writer as Milton is not irrelevant to consideration of public issues that are still very much with us . More important yet are the ways his education encouraged him to incorporate the voices of the past into his own voice ...
... original a writer as Milton is not irrelevant to consideration of public issues that are still very much with us . More important yet are the ways his education encouraged him to incorporate the voices of the past into his own voice ...
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
artistic authors Bartas blindness Calliope Cambridge Camenae Christian Cicero Clarendon Press Clio Colloquies composition critics Diodati divine Du Bartas E. M. W. Tillyard earlier Early Lives Edited Elegy epic Epitaph for Damon example fame father figures Ginsberg glory grammar grammar-school Greek Harvard University Harvard University Press Heav'nly Muse heroic Hesiod Hoole inspiration J. M. Dent John Milton kind of poetry Latin learned lines literary literature Loeb Classical Library London Lycidas Manso mansuetiores Mass materials matter meaning Milton's Muse mind musae Musarum Muse Muse lore Muse of history Nativity Ode notes Ovid Oxford pagan Paradise Lost Paradise Regain'd passage Paul's phrase Plato poem poem's poet poetic prologues prose reference Renaissance Riley Parker Robertus Stephanus Roman Samson Agonistes sense Shawcross Siloa's Brook song Spenser Stephanus suggests taught teaching Thesaurus Thomas thought tion tradition trans translation truth Urania usage verse William words writing written wrote York