John Milton: The Inner Life""John Milton: The Inner Life" is the product of a mature scholar's lifelong reflection on Milton. The subject matter is thus significant and intelligent. The style is lively, straightforward, and lucid. Thorpe brings to the study of Milton a breadth of general literary knowledge which is never paraded but which is pervasive in ways which enrich his understanding and ours. There are many good things to savor throughout, and the fifth chapter in particular is the best I remember on Milton's treatment of the natural world. This is an idealistic book, in the best sense, emphasizing basic human values, rather than the minutiae of technical scholarship, but it will attract wide scholarly attention, and I should think also from the general public of intelligent readers."--Roland Mushat Frye, University of Pennsylvania "A truly elegant and engaging book. Thorpe is a marvelous stylist, his prose crisp and lucid. And the individual chapters mesh wonderfully: they provide a series of perspectives on Milton, an emerging profile of the poet, especially of his inner life. That profile is strongly and finely etched and while it fixes on Milton's inner life, it also takes stock of Milton's sense of others and of the world around him. Throughout, the book is marked by an impressive mastery of Milton's poetry and prose by an agile movement between the efforts of his right, and left, hand, by a sensitive understanding and grasp of a poet who thought that the poet himself would be a true poem. I can think of no book I've read in recent years that is a better introduction to the poet through his writings, of none that makes Milton so attractively accessible to a general reading public."--Joseph A. Wittreich, Jr., University of Maryland "This is a thoughtful and well-proportioned book, lucidly and gracefully written. It should be welcomed by teachers and students of Milton's poetry and also by non-specialists. It combines fresh insights with sound judgments, and explores with tact and sensitivity the complex problem of the relations between Milton's life and personality and the major themes of his poetry and prose."--John M. Steadman, University of California, Riverside |
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Página 126
The foe , on " pitch - black wings , " is likened to a tigress pursuing her prey
through “ trackless deserts at night in the moonless darkness , ” envious of the “
fields rich in the gifts of Ceres . ” This “ dark lord of shadows , the ruler of the ...
The foe , on " pitch - black wings , " is likened to a tigress pursuing her prey
through “ trackless deserts at night in the moonless darkness , ” envious of the “
fields rich in the gifts of Ceres . ” This “ dark lord of shadows , the ruler of the ...
Página 159
( Prose , I , 795 ) As early as the First Prolusion , Milton as an undergraduate
chose to make the simple alternation of day and night into a struggle on the part
of two personified abstractions , and to argue that they have mutual repulsion and
...
( Prose , I , 795 ) As early as the First Prolusion , Milton as an undergraduate
chose to make the simple alternation of day and night into a struggle on the part
of two personified abstractions , and to argue that they have mutual repulsion and
...
Página 160
For when night falls all things grow foul and vile . ( Prose , I , 230 ) And so on with
an amusing tirade in which night and death end up as bedfellows . It was a
thought that stayed with him . In his touching letter to Leonard Philaras in 1654 ,
he is ...
For when night falls all things grow foul and vile . ( Prose , I , 230 ) And so on with
an amusing tirade in which night and death end up as bedfellows . It was a
thought that stayed with him . In his touching letter to Leonard Philaras in 1654 ,
he is ...
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Contenido
Informing Values Chapter II The Sense of the Self Inner Drives | 25 |
SelfEsteem | 51 |
The Sense of Others | 77 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
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