The Muse's Method: An Introduction to Paradise Lost, Volumen10Chatto & Windus, 1962 - 227 páginas |
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Página 12
... inevitably , a falsification of vital experience . We are reading Milton's poem today , however , at a distance of almost three hundred years ; and we are millennia farther from the paradisiacal state in which apprehension is both ...
... inevitably , a falsification of vital experience . We are reading Milton's poem today , however , at a distance of almost three hundred years ; and we are millennia farther from the paradisiacal state in which apprehension is both ...
Página 88
... inevitably reminded of William Blake and D. H. Lawrence . Blake was wrong about a great many things in Paradise Lost , and he did not understand Milton's theology ; but when he and his wife , nude in their own garden , read Milton's ...
... inevitably reminded of William Blake and D. H. Lawrence . Blake was wrong about a great many things in Paradise Lost , and he did not understand Milton's theology ; but when he and his wife , nude in their own garden , read Milton's ...
Página 131
... inevitable the traditional means of warfare in the traditional wars , the trust in the material means in this warfare inevitably limits power . We had expected the flytings , but we had not expected such irony , so much " derision ...
... inevitable the traditional means of warfare in the traditional wars , the trust in the material means in this warfare inevitably limits power . We had expected the flytings , but we had not expected such irony , so much " derision ...
Contenido
Preface page | ix |
The Beginning | 11 |
Satan Sin and Death | 32 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
action Adam and Eve Adam's already angels appearance assume attempt become begins believe Book cause concerned continue created creation dark Death delight described desire destruction divine doubt Earth eternal Eve's evil expected experience expresses eyes fact fair faith fall fear final follow force freedom Fruit future give God's hand happy hath Heav'n Hell heroic human ignorance imagine immediate inevitably knowledge least less light lines live man's means merely Michael MICHIGAN Milton mind motions move movement nature never once opening Paradise Lost passage passion perceived perfection poem poet possess possible praise present providence question Raphael reader reality reason recognize relation reminded response Satan seems seen sense sexual sight sound speech Spirit thee things thir thou thought true turn universe vision wish