John Milton: The Critical Heritage Volume 1 1628-1731John T. Shawcross The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling student and researcher to read the material themselves. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 45
Page viii
... ADDISON on Paradise Lost 1694 44 GILDON'S vindication of Paradise Lost 1694 45 HUME's annotations of Paradise Lost 1695 46 DENNIS On Milton's Devils 1696 IOS 107 109 112 47 WESLEY on heroic poetry 1697 114 48 BAYLE's notice 1697 116 49 ...
... ADDISON on Paradise Lost 1694 44 GILDON'S vindication of Paradise Lost 1694 45 HUME's annotations of Paradise Lost 1695 46 DENNIS On Milton's Devils 1696 IOS 107 109 112 47 WESLEY on heroic poetry 1697 114 48 BAYLE's notice 1697 116 49 ...
Page ix
... ADDISON's papers on Paradise Lost , Spectator 1712 64 ADDISON on imagination and Paradise Lost , Spectator 1712 65 WELSTED on Milton's sublimity 1712 221 222 66 ELLWOOD on the composition of the epics 1714 67 EUSDEN on reading Addison ...
... ADDISON's papers on Paradise Lost , Spectator 1712 64 ADDISON on imagination and Paradise Lost , Spectator 1712 65 WELSTED on Milton's sublimity 1712 221 222 66 ELLWOOD on the composition of the epics 1714 67 EUSDEN on reading Addison ...
Page 8
... Addison's remarks on Paradise Lost . Today Milton's indebtedness to these two epic poets is repeatedly assumed , but no full study of his relationship with either exists in print . Only the publisher's ( Moseley's ) prefatory letter to ...
... Addison's remarks on Paradise Lost . Today Milton's indebtedness to these two epic poets is repeatedly assumed , but no full study of his relationship with either exists in print . Only the publisher's ( Moseley's ) prefatory letter to ...
Page 22
... Addison a few years later - arose from what some today might still consider viable points and from the argument over rhyme . In 1685 Dryden was bothered by the stretches of verse that he considered dull and harsh of sound ; in 1693 he ...
... Addison a few years later - arose from what some today might still consider viable points and from the argument over rhyme . In 1685 Dryden was bothered by the stretches of verse that he considered dull and harsh of sound ; in 1693 he ...
Page 25
You have reached your viewing limit for this book.
You have reached your viewing limit for this book.
Contents
1 | |
Personal Statements and Contemporary Evaluations 16281674 | 35 |
Further Seventeenthcentury Comment 16751699 | 84 |
Eighteenthcentury Comment to Bentleys Edition of Paradise Lost 17001731 | 124 |
APPENDICES | 265 |
INDEX | 271 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Action Adam and Eve Addison admirable Aeneas Aeneid Allegory allusions ancient appear Aristotle Author Battel beautiful blank verse Book of Paradise Characters Charles Gildon Circumstances Creation criticism Death described Description Divine Dryden Earth edition Epic Poem Epick Episode Essay Extract from John Fable fame Fault Genius give Gods hath Heaven Hero Heroic Poem Homer Homer and Virgil Ideas Iliad Images Imagination Imitation infernal Invention John Dennis John Dryden John Milton Judgment kind Language Latin learned Leonard Welsted likewise literary Majesty Mankind Manner Milton's Poem Mind modern Nature noble Numbers observe Opinion Paradise Lost Paradise Regain'd particular Passage Passion Persons Place Poet Poetical Poetry printed proper prose Reader Religion Remarks represented rhyme Samson Agonistes Satan Scripture Sentiments shew shewn Sonnet 17 speak Spectator Speech Spirit Stile Subject sublime take Notice thing thou Thoughts tion Tragedy Translated Virgil wherein Words World writ writing