Voice and Crisis: Invocation in Milton's Poetry |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 64
Page 44
... Paradise Lost ( 1667 ) was a distance of almost thirty years during which no major poetic achievement ap- peared . Even the 1645 edition of the Poems becomes a retrospective testament to youthful promise.20 The tomorrow promised by the ...
... Paradise Lost ( 1667 ) was a distance of almost thirty years during which no major poetic achievement ap- peared . Even the 1645 edition of the Poems becomes a retrospective testament to youthful promise.20 The tomorrow promised by the ...
Page 111
Invocation in Milton's Poetry Walter Schindler. Milton's Epic Voice : The Narrator in Paradise Lost ( Cambridge , Mass .: Harvard University Press , 1963 ) ; Louis L. Martz , The Paradise Within : Studies in Vaughan , Traherne , and ...
Invocation in Milton's Poetry Walter Schindler. Milton's Epic Voice : The Narrator in Paradise Lost ( Cambridge , Mass .: Harvard University Press , 1963 ) ; Louis L. Martz , The Paradise Within : Studies in Vaughan , Traherne , and ...
Page 112
... Paradise Lost naturally has elicited many critical appreciations . The most sensitive commentary of recent vintage is , in my opinion , Dame Helen Gardner's A Reading of Paradise Lost ( Oxford : Clarendon Press , 1965 ) , pp . 16-20 ...
... Paradise Lost naturally has elicited many critical appreciations . The most sensitive commentary of recent vintage is , in my opinion , Dame Helen Gardner's A Reading of Paradise Lost ( Oxford : Clarendon Press , 1965 ) , pp . 16-20 ...
Contents
The Pattern of Invocation in Miltons Poetry | 11 |
Paradise Lost | 45 |
Voice and Crisis | 63 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Adam appear attempt becomes beginning blind Book Cambridge Christian classical create crisis Criticism dark descent divine early echoes edition enemies English epic example experience express eyes fair Fall father final hast hear heard heart Heav'n holy hope human hymn imagination inspiration invocation invokes John Milton L'Allegro later light living London Lord Lycidas lyric man's Milton mind Muse Nativity nature once opening Orpheus Paradise Lost passage pastoral pattern perhaps poem poet poet's poetic poetry possible praise prayer presence present Psalms reader Regained relation religious remember Return Samson Satan secret seems sense sing song soul spirit story structure Studies thee theme things thou tion tradition Trans transcendent translation triumph true turn ultimate University Press unto verse vision vocation voice York