Milton's Paradise LostAn approach to the poem - Satan and Hell - Heaven - Earth - The critics_ |
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Page 96
... certainly an encouragement to Adam and Eve to become like gods . If eating the fruit will produce that effect , perhaps they should eat it . How - and this is where the dream is really confusing— is Eve to distinguish between Raphael ...
... certainly an encouragement to Adam and Eve to become like gods . If eating the fruit will produce that effect , perhaps they should eat it . How - and this is where the dream is really confusing— is Eve to distinguish between Raphael ...
Page 109
... Certainly Adam's outburst is joyous ; certainly the poem has demon- strated this scheme of good from evil - creation has resulted from the revolt ; and we are told of the redemption to result from the Fall . And yet the redemption is ...
... Certainly Adam's outburst is joyous ; certainly the poem has demon- strated this scheme of good from evil - creation has resulted from the revolt ; and we are told of the redemption to result from the Fall . And yet the redemption is ...
Page 121
... of the ritual.30 29. Jackson Cope , The Metaphoric Structure of ' Paradise Lost ' ( 1962 ) , p . 96 ; Cope's italics . 30. Revaluation , pp . 43-4 . Certainly the Miltonic verse paragraph is stylized , certainly it 121.
... of the ritual.30 29. Jackson Cope , The Metaphoric Structure of ' Paradise Lost ' ( 1962 ) , p . 96 ; Cope's italics . 30. Revaluation , pp . 43-4 . Certainly the Miltonic verse paragraph is stylized , certainly it 121.
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Common terms and phrases
action Adam and Eve Adam's Addison ambiguity argued argument beauty becomes bliss Book burning lake C. S. Lewis certainly Christ Christopher Ricks classical comparison complex contrast corruption created creation dance darkness Death degradation described destruction devils E. M. W. Tillyard Earth eating the fruit echo emphasized Empson epic hero Eve's evil evoke eyes F. R. Leavis Fall fallen angels fallen world flowers forbidden garden glory God's happiness Heaven Helen Gardner Hell heroic heroism human idea imagery implication innocence insist irony knowledge Leavis light man's merely metaphorical Milton Milton Criticism Milton's God moral narrative nature omnipotent Pandæmonium Paradise Lost parody passage pattern poem poem's poetry Poets Preface to Paradise presented Raphael reader redemption reminds rhetoric richness Satan says scheme seems serpent Seventeenth Century shows similes speech suggests T. S. Eliot thee theme theological thir thou traditional tragic tree unfallen Waldock words