Voice and Crisis: Invocation in Milton's Poetry |
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Page 37
... once more , O ye Laurels , and once more Ye Myrtles brown , with Ivy never sear , I com to pluck your Berries harsh and crude . . These lines are not merely an apostrophe ; the reader rightly feels that they charge and recharge the ...
... once more , O ye Laurels , and once more Ye Myrtles brown , with Ivy never sear , I com to pluck your Berries harsh and crude . . These lines are not merely an apostrophe ; the reader rightly feels that they charge and recharge the ...
Page 40
... once more " reacts both to the thought " no more " and to the possibility " never again . " In this sense , the poem's opening words contain an implied apotropaism , an overcoming of the double threat that this poem might not come into ...
... once more " reacts both to the thought " no more " and to the possibility " never again . " In this sense , the poem's opening words contain an implied apotropaism , an overcoming of the double threat that this poem might not come into ...
Page 99
... To bring my feet again into the snare / where once I have been caught ” ( 931–32 ) . Yet , in a sense , the hero dies an " ensnared " death - entrapped by the crumbling " Theatre " ( line 1,605 ) he VOICE AND CRISIS 99.
... To bring my feet again into the snare / where once I have been caught ” ( 931–32 ) . Yet , in a sense , the hero dies an " ensnared " death - entrapped by the crumbling " Theatre " ( line 1,605 ) he VOICE AND CRISIS 99.
Contents
The Pattern of Invocation in Miltons Poetry | 11 |
Paradise Lost | 45 |
Voice and Crisis | 63 |
Copyright | |
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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