Milton and the MusesUniversity of Alabama Press, 1989 - 174 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 24
Página 33
... sense of describing the poem's meter , and yet Milton sometimes used muse in the sense of a particular kind of poetry like occasional or pastoral with no reference at all to its meter.31 An occa- sional , celebratory type of poetry is ...
... sense of describing the poem's meter , and yet Milton sometimes used muse in the sense of a particular kind of poetry like occasional or pastoral with no reference at all to its meter.31 An occa- sional , celebratory type of poetry is ...
Página 53
... sense willing to admit the superiority of Latin culture and language , but only in a sense , and his preference in these con- texts for the Camenae is instructive . As the Latins admired the superiority of Greek art and literature , yet ...
... sense willing to admit the superiority of Latin culture and language , but only in a sense , and his preference in these con- texts for the Camenae is instructive . As the Latins admired the superiority of Greek art and literature , yet ...
Página 106
... sense Milton felt that his education began with Thomas Young . Through Young's guidance he first surveyed the Aonian retreats . ( " Primus ego Aonios illo praeeunte recessus / Lustrabam . . . . ” ) The allusion to Clio strengthens the ...
... sense Milton felt that his education began with Thomas Young . Through Young's guidance he first surveyed the Aonian retreats . ( " Primus ego Aonios illo praeeunte recessus / Lustrabam . . . . ” ) The allusion to Clio strengthens 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