Milton's Sonnets & the Ideal CommunityUniversity of Nebraska Press, 1979 - 213 páginas |
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Página 146
... light is spent , / Ere half my days , in this dark world and wide . " Realizing that , at either forty- four or forty - seven ( depending on which date is preferred ) , Milton would have exceeded thirty - five , half his biblical three ...
... light is spent , / Ere half my days , in this dark world and wide . " Realizing that , at either forty- four or forty - seven ( depending on which date is preferred ) , Milton would have exceeded thirty - five , half his biblical three ...
Página 147
... light for denying him enough light to serve reveals how clouded his vision has become . As in Sonnet 7 , his anxiety again makes him misconstrue godly measurement : he worries about counting ( " half my days ... one Talent " ) and ...
... light for denying him enough light to serve reveals how clouded his vision has become . As in Sonnet 7 , his anxiety again makes him misconstrue godly measurement : he worries about counting ( " half my days ... one Talent " ) and ...
Página 154
... light . " Since the opening line , he has tried to distance himself from blindness by referring to his eyes in the third person ( " these eys ... thir seeing . . . thir idle orbs " ) , as separate beings who have merely " forgot " their ...
... light . " Since the opening line , he has tried to distance himself from blindness by referring to his eyes in the third person ( " these eys ... thir seeing . . . thir idle orbs " ) , as separate beings who have merely " forgot " their ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Adam addressed allusion already angels become believed blindness called Christian church civilization complete consider critics Cromwell dark death defends describes despite divine domestic early earth earthly enemies England English faith fallen feast final follow force freedom friends God's grace hand harmony heaven Honigmann hope human ideal individual Italian Italy John king Kingdom lady language later Lawes learned liberty light lines Lives London lyric marriage meaning measure Milton Milton's Sonnets nature noted opening Paradise Paradise Lost perfect physical poem poet poetic poetry political praise present Press providence Puritan quatrain reader reason reference Renaissance seems separation sequence serve sing Smectymnuus song Sonnet 11 soul speaker spirit structure suggests tradition true turn University University Press virtue vision wait wife young