The Life of John MiltonOxford University Press, 1983 - 278 páginas The author in this new biography of Milton sees the man whole, and in doing so enhances our understanding not only of his character but also of his poetry. |
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Página 13
... live eternally in torment ; for my part , I can live no longer , than the putrid moisture of your body will give me leave , and therefore I will not change ; nay , would the Devil himself change with a damned soul ? I cannot tell ...
... live eternally in torment ; for my part , I can live no longer , than the putrid moisture of your body will give me leave , and therefore I will not change ; nay , would the Devil himself change with a damned soul ? I cannot tell ...
Página 32
... lives there are epiphanies , when a man or a woman suddenly knows the direction in which they are to go , or not to go ... live with them below . . . ... ( 85-90 ) But , of course , the poem is infinitely more than a Nativity painting ...
... lives there are epiphanies , when a man or a woman suddenly knows the direction in which they are to go , or not to go ... live with them below . . . ... ( 85-90 ) But , of course , the poem is infinitely more than a Nativity painting ...
Página 53
... live by writing poetry , not merely because poetry makes no money , but because poetry cannot possibly take up the whole of a man's day . Study , learning , the ' curious search into knowledge ' was , as his nephew said after his death ...
... live by writing poetry , not merely because poetry makes no money , but because poetry cannot possibly take up the whole of a man's day . Study , learning , the ' curious search into knowledge ' was , as his nephew said after his death ...
Contenido
Prologue I | 1 |
The Pigeon of Pauls | 5 |
The Courtier | 38 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 16 secciones no mostradas
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Términos y frases comunes
Areopagitica believe bishops blind boys Bread Street Bunhill Fields C. V. Wedgwood called Cambridge Cambridge Platonists century certainly Chalfont St Giles Charles Christ Christian Church Comus Countess of Derby course Cromwell Cromwell's Darbishire death Defensio Secunda delight Diodati divine divorce doctrine doubtless Earl Edward Phillips England English epic evidence eyes father felt Forest Hill friends Greek hath Ibid imagine Italian Italy John Milton King knew Lady Latin Lawes learning liberty live London look Lord Lycidas Manso marriage married Mary masque mind nation never Old Cause Oxford pamphlets papist Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parliament parliamentary perhaps poem poet poetry political Powell Presbyterian probably prose Protestant Reformation religious royalist Samson Agonistes Scriptures seems Shakespeare sight sonnet Spenser St Paul's suggested thee things Thomas Young thou thought verse virtue wife writing written wrote Yale