Paradise Lost: Ideal and Tragic EpicIn Paradise Lost, his poetic retelling of the story of Adam and Eve, John Milton sought to create a Christian parallel to the classical works of Homer and Virgil. His achievement remains the undisputed masterpiece of the epic for in English. Francis Blessington's Paradise Lost: Ideal and Tragic Epic clarifies the complexities of the poem and highlights its relevance to our own time as well as Milton's. |
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Page 13
... inspired by the grand poem . Milton has given critics an elevated subject to praise ( or grouse about ) . The result is sometimes that rare interaction wherein critics find their terms , their enemies , their concepts , their ideologies ...
... inspired by the grand poem . Milton has given critics an elevated subject to praise ( or grouse about ) . The result is sometimes that rare interaction wherein critics find their terms , their enemies , their concepts , their ideologies ...
Page 97
... inspired to sing by the Holy Spirit , the power of God that inspired Moses and other biblical writers . In the Renaissance , more use of autobiography appeared : Ariosto , Spenser , and DuBartas could incor- porate biographical data ...
... inspired to sing by the Holy Spirit , the power of God that inspired Moses and other biblical writers . In the Renaissance , more use of autobiography appeared : Ariosto , Spenser , and DuBartas could incor- porate biographical data ...
Page 99
... inspired by the muse , Homer's aoidĂȘ . As a prophet - poet , he is inspired by God , but as a scholar - poet he has trained himself to be the fit vessel . As prophet , the bard knows what to say ; as craftsman he makes the forms to ...
... inspired by the muse , Homer's aoidĂȘ . As a prophet - poet , he is inspired by God , but as a scholar - poet he has trained himself to be the fit vessel . As prophet , the bard knows what to say ; as craftsman he makes the forms to ...
Contents
Historical Context | 1 |
Importance of the Work | 6 |
Critical Reception | 12 |
Copyright | |
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Paradise Lost: Ideal and Tragic Epic Francis C. Blessington,Francis C.. Blessington No preview available - 1988 |
Common terms and phrases
A. E. Housman Abdiel accept action Adam and Eve Adam learns Adam's Addison Aeneid allegorical allusions Aristotle battle Bible biblical Blake Cambridge characters Christian classical epic conception context created creation death divine dramatic Dryden E. M. W. Tillyard earth English epic poem epic poetry Eve's evil Fall fallen Father feel Flow'rs fruit garden genre glory God's guilt happiness hath heaven Hebrew Hell heroic heroism Homer human Iliad inspired John Dryden John Milton King language literary literature live London Lord metaphor Michael Milton criticism Milton's epic Milton's style mind narrator nature Oxford Paradise Lost parallel poet poetic political praise prelapsarian prophecy Prose Raphael reader rebel angels Renaissance rhetoric Satan seed serpent shalt shows Son's speech Spirit story symbolic Tasso thee thir thou thought tion tragedy tree true truth University Press unto verse Virgil vision W. H. Auden woman writing