Truth in Our Practice: Representing Justice in Milton's Poetry and ProseUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 2003 - 386 pages |
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Page 90
... youth who might be Mercy or Peace , " Or other of that heav'nly brood " ( 55 ) . " The infant's soul " The line that mentions this youth lacks a disyllable , and editors disagree about who the youth might represent . See Flannagan , The ...
... youth who might be Mercy or Peace , " Or other of that heav'nly brood " ( 55 ) . " The infant's soul " The line that mentions this youth lacks a disyllable , and editors disagree about who the youth might represent . See Flannagan , The ...
Page 125
... youth ( CE 8.61 ) and therefore fully capable to act as a traditional chivalric defender of the state , but with his sight completely gone by February 1652 , he instead emphasizes his own role as a writer and teacher of the reading ...
... youth ( CE 8.61 ) and therefore fully capable to act as a traditional chivalric defender of the state , but with his sight completely gone by February 1652 , he instead emphasizes his own role as a writer and teacher of the reading ...
Page 359
... youth " would take away from the monument an appropriate amount of inspiration , as they view and read the memory of ... youths seem like they have been molded into future heroes . But their response to the monument is thrown into ...
... youth " would take away from the monument an appropriate amount of inspiration , as they view and read the memory of ... youths seem like they have been molded into future heroes . But their response to the monument is thrown into ...
Contents
Acknowledgments | 1 |
Constructing a Just Self in the | 72 |
Determinable Justice in The | 128 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Abdiel act of justice actions Adam Adam's Areopagitica argument Aristotle asserts Astraea audience authority Cambridge Univ Chapter Charles Charles's Christ Christian Christopher Hill Civil conception of justice conscience covenant Danites defense depicts discourse discussed divine justice Eikon Basilike Eikonoklastes England English citizens English Commonwealth execution Faerie Queene faith falsehood fulfillment function God's justice godly Golden Age hath human individuals injustice inner instance intelligibility interpretation Irish John Milton justice in Paradise king king's linguistic contract literary Lycidas maintains mercy Milton writes monarch monument narrative natural law Nicomachean Ethics notion of justice observes Paradise Lost Parliament perform poem poetry political practice of truth practice the truth Press principle of justice prose provides public sphere punishment readers represents republican Restoration rhetorical right reason righteousness royalist Samson Agonistes Satan sense serves seventeenth century speech acts Stanley Fish Tenure thir transformation truth and justice tyranny tyrant unjust virtue