Milton: Paradise LostA. E. Dyson, Julian Lovelock Macmillan, 1973 - Всего страниц: 253 |
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Стр. 88
... simile will easily occur to every one's memory . Paradise is compared to the field of Enna - one beautiful landscape to another ( IV 268 ) . But , of course , the deeper value of the simile lies in the resemblance which is not ...
... simile will easily occur to every one's memory . Paradise is compared to the field of Enna - one beautiful landscape to another ( IV 268 ) . But , of course , the deeper value of the simile lies in the resemblance which is not ...
Стр. 163
... simile have a point of contact - their existence in the larger perspective - which allows the poem to yoke them to- gether without identifying them . Often , part of the statement a simile makes concerns the relationship between the ...
... simile have a point of contact - their existence in the larger perspective - which allows the poem to yoke them to- gether without identifying them . Often , part of the statement a simile makes concerns the relationship between the ...
Стр. 171
... simile compresses them , and all deceptions , into a single instant , forever recurring . The celebrated falling - leaves simile moves from angel form to leaves to sedge to Busiris and his Memphian Chivalry , or in typological terms ...
... simile compresses them , and all deceptions , into a single instant , forever recurring . The celebrated falling - leaves simile moves from angel form to leaves to sedge to Busiris and his Memphian Chivalry , or in typological terms ...
Содержание
Acknowledgements 7 | 9 |
ANDREW MARVELL p 35JOHN DENNIS P | 35 |
WILLIAM BLAKE p 44WILLIAM | 55 |
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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