Paradise Lost (Hughes Edition)Hackett Publishing, 2003 M01 1 - 384 páginas Since its publication by Odyssey Press in 1935, Hughes's richly annotated edition--revised in 1962--remains the preferred text of many instructors. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 48
Página xviii
... leaves . Conscience , in a shape , accuses him ; Justice cites him to the place whither Jehovah called for him . In the meantime the Chorus entertains the stage and is informed by some Angel of the manner of his Fall . Here the Chorus ...
... leaves . Conscience , in a shape , accuses him ; Justice cites him to the place whither Jehovah called for him . In the meantime the Chorus entertains the stage and is informed by some Angel of the manner of his Fall . Here the Chorus ...
Página xix
... is grandeur but no heroism in his later soliloquies and after the seduction of Eve he departs to Hell , leaving the world to his vice - gerents Sin and Death . There is no doubt of Milton's intent to degrade him INTRODUCTION xix.
... is grandeur but no heroism in his later soliloquies and after the seduction of Eve he departs to Hell , leaving the world to his vice - gerents Sin and Death . There is no doubt of Milton's intent to degrade him INTRODUCTION xix.
Página xxviii
... leaving Hell - we approach the universe which the Son of God shapes with his golden compasses in Book VII we are inclined to think of the account of the creation as only a kind of long approach to the - for us - more interesting account ...
... leaving Hell - we approach the universe which the Son of God shapes with his golden compasses in Book VII we are inclined to think of the account of the creation as only a kind of long approach to the - for us - more interesting account ...
Página xxxviii
... leaves no doubt that Milton thought of creation as God's shaping through the Word , his Son , of the unformed matter which originated in him . Milton's reason for thinking so was simply his understanding of the meaning of the Hebrew ...
... leaves no doubt that Milton thought of creation as God's shaping through the Word , his Son , of the unformed matter which originated in him . Milton's reason for thinking so was simply his understanding of the meaning of the Hebrew ...
Página xxxix
... leaves More aery , last the bright consummate flow'r Spirits odorous breathes . Life and all being vitally resemble or involve processes like those of the di- gestion of food in the human body , which produces spirits ( as Milton calls ...
... leaves More aery , last the bright consummate flow'r Spirits odorous breathes . Life and all being vitally resemble or involve processes like those of the di- gestion of food in the human body , which produces spirits ( as Milton calls ...
Contenido
XI | 1 |
XII | 5 |
XIII | 30 |
XIV | 60 |
XV | 83 |
XVI | 113 |
XVII | 138 |
XVIII | 163 |
XIX | 183 |
XX | 202 |
XXI | 234 |
XXII | 265 |
XXIII | 290 |
XXIV | 309 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Paradise Lost: A Poem in Twelve Books John Milton,Merritt Yerkes Hughes Sin vista previa disponible - 2003 |
Términos y frases comunes
Adam Adam and Eve Adam's Aeneid angels appear'd Areopagitica battle in Heaven Beast Beelzebub behold Belial bliss Book bright C. S. Lewis C.Ed call'd Celestial Chaos Cherubim Cloud Comus creation Creatures dark Death deep devils Divine Du Bartas dwell Earth Eternal Ev'ning evil eyes fair Faith fall Father fire Flow'rs Fruit Gates Genesis glory God's Gods grace ground hand happy hath Heav'n heav'nly Hell Hesiod highth Hill John Milton keeps its Latin King Latin Latin meaning light live Lord Nature Night Ovid Paradise Lost passage poem Psalm rais'd Raphael repli'd return'd Satan says seem'd Serpent sight soon spake Spirits stars stood sweet taste thee thence things thir thou hast thought Throne Timaeus tradition Tree turn'd VIII virtue wings words World Zeus