Literature and the Rise of Capitalism: Critical Essays Mainly on the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries |
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Page 119
... Milton's style , in Lycidas , Comus and Paradise Lost , that from time to time brushes aside the inclination to fantasy and egoism . Milton's real strength lay here and in the connections with contemporary life which this suggests ...
... Milton's style , in Lycidas , Comus and Paradise Lost , that from time to time brushes aside the inclination to fantasy and egoism . Milton's real strength lay here and in the connections with contemporary life which this suggests ...
Page 124
... Milton's style , " communicating his meaning circuitously through a long succession of associated ideas ” , what I would describe as a perplexed groping after some satisfactory conclusion . That the discussion between Raphael and Adam ...
... Milton's style , " communicating his meaning circuitously through a long succession of associated ideas ” , what I would describe as a perplexed groping after some satisfactory conclusion . That the discussion between Raphael and Adam ...
Page 125
... Milton's own poetry - outwardly attractive , inwardly less exact . I am not suggesting that Milton is deliberately appraising himself , simply that in the creation of Eve Milton reveals the same predica- ment as that revealed in the ...
... Milton's own poetry - outwardly attractive , inwardly less exact . I am not suggesting that Milton is deliberately appraising himself , simply that in the creation of Eve Milton reveals the same predica- ment as that revealed in the ...
Contents
Preface | 9 |
Love Poetry in the Sixteenth Century | 21 |
Literature in the Seventeenth | 86 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abstract Adam Adam's appraisal art of Hobbes attitude beauty become believe Book Bunyan Chaucer common conceit courtly love Cressida criticism D. H. Lawrence defines Diomed doctrine Donne Donne's doth earth Elizabethan love poetry Elizabethan poetry England English expression feeling feudal gold golden hath human nature idioms imagination Johnson lady language Leviathan lines London lord lover Lycidas Macaulay medieval merchants Milton's mind moral More's observed Offor opinion ornament Paradise Lost particular passage passions pearl perplexity Pilgrim's Progress poem poetic poets political praise prose Puritan Puttenham Queene Vertue's court R. H. Tawney Rankins Rasselas realise reason refers relationship remarked rich Richard Barnfield Satan sense Shakespeare shepherd Sidney Sidney's sixteenth century social society sonnet Sonnet 30 soul Spenser spirit Stella style suggests thee things Thomas Thomas Whythorne thou tion traditional Troilus Troilus and Cressida Utopia virtue vision Volpone whilst Whythorne words Wyatt
References to this book
Ideology and Desire in Renaissance Poetry: The Subject of Donne Ronald Corthell Limited preview - 1997 |