Milton's 'Paradise Lost.' |
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Page 96
... become , like any other poetic imagery , substantial parts of the story , and the imaginative forces they release ... becomes an element in the growing forces of his narrative . These are the two chief points to be demonstrated . I shall ...
... become , like any other poetic imagery , substantial parts of the story , and the imaginative forces they release ... becomes an element in the growing forces of his narrative . These are the two chief points to be demonstrated . I shall ...
Page 107
... become symbols for those characters and themes . This is one of the means by which he makes plain the course and meaning of his story , and by which he holds the immense structure of his poem firmly together . It can be best illustrated ...
... become symbols for those characters and themes . This is one of the means by which he makes plain the course and meaning of his story , and by which he holds the immense structure of his poem firmly together . It can be best illustrated ...
Page 204
... become sinful mortals like ourselves and , although their characters do not change , their change of state allows of their charac- ters being more fully developed as ordinary human beings . Then , at the close of the poem , they emerge ...
... become sinful mortals like ourselves and , although their characters do not change , their change of state allows of their charac- ters being more fully developed as ordinary human beings . Then , at the close of the poem , they emerge ...
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Common terms and phrases
accepted action Adam and Eve Adam's angels appear argument become beginning better Book called century character comes common course created creation criticism Death describing doctrine Earth effect English epic evil example expressed fact Fall Father feel figure follows fruit God's hand Heaven Hell heroic human ideas images imagination knowledge language Latin less light lines live look means MICHIGAN Milton mind narrative nature never once opening original Paradise Lost passage peace person picture poem poet poetic poetry presented question reader reason relation represent Satan says scene seen sense sight simile stand story style tells thee things thir thou thought tion told true truth UNIVERSITY verse whole wind write