Paradise lost1966 |
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Page 122
... thought Adam and Eve in their innocence both finer and more original than anything in Homer or Virgil . After the fall , the pair were marked by guilt and infirmity , but even so were repre- sentative of us all and therefore interesting ...
... thought Adam and Eve in their innocence both finer and more original than anything in Homer or Virgil . After the fall , the pair were marked by guilt and infirmity , but even so were repre- sentative of us all and therefore interesting ...
Page 123
... thought Milton sublime , had some criticisms to offer which were to prove influential . He was rather critical of Milton's early poems . He found them neat , elegant , and original , but " too often distinguished by re- pulsive ...
... thought Milton sublime , had some criticisms to offer which were to prove influential . He was rather critical of Milton's early poems . He found them neat , elegant , and original , but " too often distinguished by re- pulsive ...
Page 124
... thought Milton not equipped to excel in drama , being deficient in real knowledge of men . ROMANTIC PERIOD ( 1800-1825 ) : In spite of Johnson's stric- tures ( Thorp notes ) , Milton continued to be admired and imitated in the ...
... thought Milton not equipped to excel in drama , being deficient in real knowledge of men . ROMANTIC PERIOD ( 1800-1825 ) : In spite of Johnson's stric- tures ( Thorp notes ) , Milton continued to be admired and imitated in the ...
Contents
JOHN MILTON | 5 |
three MILTONS MAJOR WORKS | 15 |
four PARADISE LOST | 26 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Abdiel Adam and Eve Adam says Adam's Aeneid asks battle beasts beautiful become Beelzebub beginning of Book blame blind Chaos choose Christ comes Comus created creatures Dagon danger Death defeat destroy devils E. M. W. Tillyard Earth eat the fruit Eliot end of Book envy epic eternal Eve's evil F. R. Leavis fall fallen angels Father fool forces Gabriel Garden gates glory God's grace Greek happy Harapha hate Heaven heavenly Hell Holy Trinity host human innocence John Milton King knowledge L'Allegro Lines live looks Lycidas means Messiah Michael Milton nature obedience offer pain Paradise Lost PARADISE LOST-BOOK Paradise Regained peace poem poet poetry praise punishment Puritan Raphael reader rebel Renaissance repent replies rest Samson Agonistes Satan serpent shows soliloquy sonnets speak speech suffer tells temptation tempted things thought throne told tree true truth ugly Uriel virtue words