John MiltonContinuum, 1990 - 189 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 11
Página 41
... express the reality of sudden , accidental death . He seems unsure , too , about the suit- ability of Ovidian imagery — the personified winter ( death ) and Apollo ( the sun ) —to express Christian consolation . The ques- tions that ...
... express the reality of sudden , accidental death . He seems unsure , too , about the suit- ability of Ovidian imagery — the personified winter ( death ) and Apollo ( the sun ) —to express Christian consolation . The ques- tions that ...
Página 43
... express the timeless mystery that Christ was , and is , an infant who must die just as he has died for " Our great redemption . " The tenses therefore shift from the insistent immediacy of the present in the opening line to the past ( 4 ) ...
... express the timeless mystery that Christ was , and is , an infant who must die just as he has died for " Our great redemption . " The tenses therefore shift from the insistent immediacy of the present in the opening line to the past ( 4 ) ...
Página 62
... express a more realistic view of life . Images of nature that had suggested growth and maturity are replaced by ones suggesting decay and death ; this becomes the poem's basic dialectic . The death of Lycidas has destroyed the pastoral ...
... express a more realistic view of life . Images of nature that had suggested growth and maturity are replaced by ones suggesting decay and death ; this becomes the poem's basic dialectic . The death of Lycidas has destroyed the pastoral ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
action Adam and Eve Adam's angels aware beauty becomes begins blind Book called cause Christ Christian church claims classical comes complete Comus contrast created creation critics darkness death described divine Earth earthly English epic Eve's evil express faith fall fallen Father fear feelings final follow forces freedom God's Heaven heavenly Hell hero heroism hope human ideal ideas important indicates Italy John King knowledge Lady language later lead learning light lines London man's means Milton mind moves nature obedience Paradise Lost pastoral perfect physical poem poet poet's poetic poetry political possible present Press provides questions reader reason reflects remains reminds response result reveals Samson Satan says seems seen sense serpent shows Son's speech Spirit story strength style suggests temptation theme tion traditional tree tries University virtue vision