Persona and Decorum in Milton's ProseAlthough recent schools of literary criticism have tended to remove the author from the text, thereby calling into question the value of persona criticism, Sanchez points out that Milton himself argues against the separation of author from persona and against the subordination of author to persona. As literary critic and dramatist in the preface to Samson Agonistes, as bard in Paradise Lost, as orator in Areopagitica, as autobiographer in the prologue to Book II of The Reason of Church Government, as "Author" of Lycidas distinguishing himself in the coda from "th' uncouth swain" - the author inside each of these and other works is clearly observed by the author who stands for a time outside the work. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 22
Page 77
... married . It may be likely , however , that his troubled marriage prompted his further and more intense consideration of the issue in four divorce tracts : The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce ( 1 August 1643 ; revised and expanded 2 ...
... married . It may be likely , however , that his troubled marriage prompted his further and more intense consideration of the issue in four divorce tracts : The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce ( 1 August 1643 ; revised and expanded 2 ...
Page 78
... divorce tracts , where Milton does have specific objects of attack — for example , Herbert Palmer and Daniel Featley in Tetrachordon - and where he does of course argue . But the decorum of the divorce tracts - the decorum of biblical ...
... divorce tracts , where Milton does have specific objects of attack — for example , Herbert Palmer and Daniel Featley in Tetrachordon - and where he does of course argue . But the decorum of the divorce tracts - the decorum of biblical ...
Page 90
... divorce tracts there are " moments of concern for the divorced wife's feelings , " but concludes that in the tracts Milton shows no concern with the husband's care for the wife within the marriage , no concern with the " emotional ...
... divorce tracts there are " moments of concern for the divorced wife's feelings , " but concludes that in the tracts Milton shows no concern with the husband's care for the wife within the marriage , no concern with the " emotional ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
ambiguity antiprelatical tracts Areopagitica argument audience biblical Cambridge charity Charles Christ Christian Church Government Civil Power concern conscience context criticism cultic prophet decorum describes divine divorce tracts doctrina christiana edition Eikonoklastes emphasizes euphuistic evil example faith false freedom Hebrew Bible Heimbach hermeneutics Ibid iconoclasm individual interpretation Jeremiah John Milton king language letter liberty Likeliest Means literary Lycidas Milton argues Milton contends Milton Studies Milton's prose monism nation Paradise Lost Parliament passage perhaps persona poem poet poetics poetry polemic political popery prophecy prophet prose style prose tract prose writing career Protestants Puritan Radzinowicz reader Readie and Easie reading Reason of Church response rhetorical Riley Parker role Roman Catholicism Samson Agonistes Scripture Second Defense self-presentation sentence seventeenth-century Shawcross spirit Stanley Fish strategy suggests teacher teaching Temple Tenure Tetrachordon thir thou toleration True Religion truth University Press VIII vision voice Wittreich word Yahweh Zechariah Zephaniah