Milton's Poetry: Its Development in TimeDuquesne University Press, 1979 - 273 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 77
Página 46
... course knew better ) objects to the " inherent improbability " of pastoral and quotes the great line , “ Battening our flocks with the fresh dews of night , " only to observe : " We know they never drove afield , and that they had no ...
... course knew better ) objects to the " inherent improbability " of pastoral and quotes the great line , “ Battening our flocks with the fresh dews of night , " only to observe : " We know they never drove afield , and that they had no ...
Página 69
... course , the psychology of the Fall , saying over and over again that Appetite is lord of Reason ; but they also provide a context for the etymological pun on " sapience , " which as Patrick Hume noted in 1695 derives from " Sapere ...
... course , the psychology of the Fall , saying over and over again that Appetite is lord of Reason ; but they also provide a context for the etymological pun on " sapience , " which as Patrick Hume noted in 1695 derives from " Sapere ...
Página 107
... course emended in the Vulgate , though the fact of the original survived to the discomfort of learned commentators . In Pro Populo Anglico Defensio Milton himself inquires " whether Sam- son acted in pursuance of a command from heaven ...
... course emended in the Vulgate , though the fact of the original survived to the discomfort of learned commentators . In Pro Populo Anglico Defensio Milton himself inquires " whether Sam- son acted in pursuance of a command from heaven ...
Contenido
Occasional Experiments | 18 |
Lycidas in Christian Time | 45 |
From Shadows to Truth | 60 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 4 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
according Adam allegory angel appears becomes beginning Book called Christ Christian classical close comes continuity contrary course creation criticism death distinction divine doctrine earth effect epic Eternity expect fall Father figure finally future God's grace hand heaven hope human idea Jesus John kind Kingdom language least less light live London Lord Lycidas meaning method Milton mind motion moving mysterious nature observes once opposites Paradise Lost Paradise Regained past pastoral patience perhaps poem poet present Providence question reader reason refers relation Renaissance represents resembles reveals Samson Satan says Scripture seems sense shadow soul speak stand temptation Testament theory things thou thought tion true truth turn types typological understanding virginity virtue vision wander whole writing York
Referencias a este libro
The Matter of Revolution: Science, Poetry, and Politics in the Age of Milton John Rogers Vista previa limitada - 1996 |
Remembering and Repeating: Biblical Creation in Paradise Lost Regina M. Schwartz Vista previa limitada - 1988 |