MiltonAlan Rudrum |
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Page 105
... reader expectation and reading experience ; and the resulting pressures ' can be seen as part of an intelligible pattern . In this way we are led to consider our own experience as a part of the poem's subject . - - By ' hard and ...
... reader expectation and reading experience ; and the resulting pressures ' can be seen as part of an intelligible pattern . In this way we are led to consider our own experience as a part of the poem's subject . - - By ' hard and ...
Page 109
... reader's attention and lead him into an error of omission . That is to say , in the attempt to follow and analyse Satan's soliloquy , the larger contexts in which it exists will be forgotten . The immediate experience of the poetry will ...
... reader's attention and lead him into an error of omission . That is to say , in the attempt to follow and analyse Satan's soliloquy , the larger contexts in which it exists will be forgotten . The immediate experience of the poetry will ...
Page 124
... reader that the poet has returned to the fallen angels . The mistake is a natural one : ' forlorn ' describes ... reader is forced to see events he necessarily perceives in sequence as time - identities . Milton cannot re - create the ...
... reader that the poet has returned to the fallen angels . The mistake is a natural one : ' forlorn ' describes ... reader is forced to see events he necessarily perceives in sequence as time - identities . Milton cannot re - create the ...
Contents
Acknowledgements 791 | 7 |
Chronology | 27 |
ARTHUR BARKER The Pattern of Miltons Nativity | 44 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
action Adam and Eve Adam's Aeneid anadiplosis angels antimetabole antistrophe beauty beginning Book xi C. S. Lewis century Christ Christian creation creature critics death divine doctrine Donne dramatic E. M. W. Tillyard Earth effect English epanalepsis epic voice epizeuxis eternity Eve's evil experience fall fallen fame glory God's hath Heaven Hell heroic human Il Penseroso incarnation John Milton knowledge L'Allegro less liberty lines literary Lucifer Lycidas marriage means melancholy Michael Milton mind moral motivation narrative nature Paradise Lost Paradise Regained paradox passage Penseroso perhaps phrase pleasures ploce poem poem's poet poetic poetry praise prose Puritan Raphael reader reading reason Renaissance rhetoric romantic Samson Agonistes Satan Satan's rebellion seems sense seventeenth seventeenth-century significance simile soul speech spirit suggested temptation thee theme things thir thou thought Tillyard tion tradition traductio true truth verse Waldock wisdom words write