Milton: Paradise LostA. E. Dyson, Julian Lovelock Macmillan, 1973 - Всего страниц: 253 |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 21
Стр. 88
... appear as something ' dragged in by the heels ' , but in poetry it turns out to be so bound up with the whole close of the first Book and the opening of the second that if it were omitted the wound would spread over about a hundred ...
... appear as something ' dragged in by the heels ' , but in poetry it turns out to be so bound up with the whole close of the first Book and the opening of the second that if it were omitted the wound would spread over about a hundred ...
Стр. 217
... of her appear- ances before the Fall . Milton brings this commonplace to life by blurring the distinction between air and water in his syntax . Bentley was shocked by the lines which I have just Tincture or Reflection 217.
... of her appear- ances before the Fall . Milton brings this commonplace to life by blurring the distinction between air and water in his syntax . Bentley was shocked by the lines which I have just Tincture or Reflection 217.
Стр. 228
... appear there ; it will come with its curious power of seeming wholly at home . This brings us to another of the ... appears . The next section moves us to Milton's especially poignant vision of Eve among the flowers , tending her ...
... appear there ; it will come with its curious power of seeming wholly at home . This brings us to another of the ... appears . The next section moves us to Milton's especially poignant vision of Eve among the flowers , tending her ...
Содержание
Acknowledgements 7 | 9 |
ANDREW MARVELL p 35JOHN DENNIS P | 35 |
WILLIAM BLAKE p 44WILLIAM | 55 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 11
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
A. E. DYSON Adam and Eve Adam's Aeneid Aeschylos archetypal Basil Willey beauty blank verse Book C. S. Lewis Christian consciousness course critics death delight Devil divine dramatic E. M. W. Tillyard effect Eliot English epic voice eternal Eve's evil F. R. Leavis fact fall fallen angels feel Frank Kermode fruit garden God's Greek heart heaven Hell hero heroic heroism Hesiod Homer human imagination innocence JOHN WAIN Kermode language less light man's means ment Milton mind modern moral myth nature never original Paradise Lost passage passions perhaps pleasure poem poem's poet poetic Prom Promethean Prometheus reader reading experience reality reason rhetoric rhyme romantic Satan seems sense Shakespeare Shelley simile SOURCE speech spirit Stock response style sublime suffering suggest syntax T. S. Eliot theme things thou thought tion true truth virtue Waldock words writing Zeus