Milton's Prose Tracts as a Gloss on Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson AgonistesStanford University, 1971 - 648 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 46
Page 2
... poet's method is in large part mimetic , derived from the realities of the human condition as the poet experienced and studied it , they may also direct an interested reader of the poetry back to the experience out of which the poetry ...
... poet's method is in large part mimetic , derived from the realities of the human condition as the poet experienced and studied it , they may also direct an interested reader of the poetry back to the experience out of which the poetry ...
Page 3
... poetry . It would not do , of course , to say that it was because Milton thought his poetry too obscure for his educated con- temporary readers that he first wrote treatises in prose . But it would also be unwise not to recognize that ...
... poetry . It would not do , of course , to say that it was because Milton thought his poetry too obscure for his educated con- temporary readers that he first wrote treatises in prose . But it would also be unwise not to recognize that ...
Page 31
... poetry was affected by his change in character ; • .poetry wells up from the subconscious " he had asserted , in agreement with Tillyard , " and it was into his subconscious that Milton sank the spiritual con- sequences of all those ...
... poetry was affected by his change in character ; • .poetry wells up from the subconscious " he had asserted , in agreement with Tillyard , " and it was into his subconscious that Milton sank the spiritual con- sequences of all those ...
Common terms and phrases
Abdiel Adam Adam and Eve Adam's angels answer Areopagitica argued argument belief Book C. S. Lewis cause Chapter Charles Chorus Christ Christian Doctrine Christian liberty church civil claim command created creation critics Cromwell Dalila death divine right divorce tracts earth Eikon Basilike Eikonoklastes Empson Eve's evil experience faith fall fallen false father flesh freedom fulfil glory God's Harapha hath heaven Hebrew hell Hooker human Jephtha John Milton judge judgment justice king kingdom kingship Lord man's marriage meaning Milton Milton's political mind monarchy moral Morand obedience Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Philistine poem poetry Psalm Puritan rational creature readers rebellion recognize reform relationship religion religious reveals right reason royalist rule ruler Salmasius Samson Agonistes Satan says Scripture Second Defence seek slaves spirit strength temptation thee things thinking thir thou thought tion true truth tyranny tyrant understand unfallen William Empson words worship