Inspiration in Milton and Keats |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 13
Page 47
... continues for another ten lines . Milton excludes some lines des- cribing the Hesperian gardens in the Trinity ... continue long enough to lose the audience's concentration ; attention is turned to the actor in costume , with ' I would ...
... continues for another ten lines . Milton excludes some lines des- cribing the Hesperian gardens in the Trinity ... continue long enough to lose the audience's concentration ; attention is turned to the actor in costume , with ' I would ...
Page 130
... continue the poem – knowing only that it should not be Milton's . The style which does come to the surface is basically his own pre - Endymion manner and idea of poetry ; and the episode in which Mnemosyne ( who has already deserted the ...
... continue the poem – knowing only that it should not be Milton's . The style which does come to the surface is basically his own pre - Endymion manner and idea of poetry ; and the episode in which Mnemosyne ( who has already deserted the ...
Page 166
... continue long in this vein before ' the whim has pass'd ' ; but when he writes Lamia , he also finds the motivation to continue in the vein to the bitter end of the story , in a brilliant parody of his own early idea of poetry and its ...
... continue long in this vein before ' the whim has pass'd ' ; but when he writes Lamia , he also finds the motivation to continue in the vein to the bitter end of the story , in a brilliant parody of his own early idea of poetry and its ...
Contents
Miltons Newenlightened World | 22 |
Milton and the Genius of the Shore | 40 |
Miltons Search for the Idea of the Beautiful | 76 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
action active appears approach beauty becomes begins close context continues darkness death describes desire direct dream early echoes emotional epic existence experience expressed external eyes fact fades Fall false figure finally finds forced function give heart heaven human Hyperion idea imagination immortal inspiration invocation Keats Keats's kind Knight knowledge language learning leaves letter light lines live look Lycidas meaning mental metaphor Milton mind mortal Muse Nativity nature never Nightingale once opening original pain Paradise Lost passion pastoral picture poem poet poet's poetic poetry present question reality relation represents rhetorical Samson seems sense sensuous shows sing song soul sound spirit stanza story suggests takes thee things thou thought true truth turns understanding verse vision voice whole wild writing written