Milton's Epic Voice: The Narrator in Paradise LostHarvard University Press, 1963 - 187 էջ |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 10–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Էջ 3
... heroic poetry are useful to us as readers of Paradise Lost because they reveal to us assumptions which Milton expected his readers to share with him about the kind of poem they were to read . Because no one writes epic in our time and ...
... heroic poetry are useful to us as readers of Paradise Lost because they reveal to us assumptions which Milton expected his readers to share with him about the kind of poem they were to read . Because no one writes epic in our time and ...
Էջ 68
... heroic poet as a man of vast learning and lofty imagina- tion , who could survey the whole world of experience in search of just and discriminating comparisons . The extended simile was also thought to be suited to heroic poetry because ...
... heroic poet as a man of vast learning and lofty imagina- tion , who could survey the whole world of experience in search of just and discriminating comparisons . The extended simile was also thought to be suited to heroic poetry because ...
Էջ 74
... heroic similes in Paradise Lost , whatever their content or narrative function or structure , express over and over the same qualities of ex- perience , attitude , vision - qualities which are the antithesis of those expressed in the ...
... heroic similes in Paradise Lost , whatever their content or narrative function or structure , express over and over the same qualities of ex- perience , attitude , vision - qualities which are the antithesis of those expressed in the ...
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Common terms and phrases
abstract meanings Adam and Eve Adam's Fall Adam's story adjective allegory allusions angels Areopagitica argument asso associated beauty bird blind bard characters circle comparisons concrete and abstract contrast created creation critical darkness described device diction divine dramatic Earth elaborate epic introductions Eve's evoke experience express extended similes fables Faerie Queene fallen reader fallen world familiar feel Fortunate Fall God's guage Heaven Hell heroic illumination illustrate images inner light innocence inspired narrator interpretation invocation lines loss Lycidas Milton's epic mortal vision narrative voice narrator's nature noun Paradise Lost particular passage pastoral poetry pattern physical poet poetry qualities Raphael rator reality recognize references reminds sacred metaphors Samson Agonistes Satan scene sense shades shape share song speaker speech Spenser's story structure style syntax thee thir thou throughout the poem tion tone tradition true pastoral world truth unfallen unique unity vision words