Paradise Lost (Hughes Edition)Since its publication by Odyssey Press in 1935, Hughes's richly annotated edition--revised in 1962--remains the preferred text of many instructors. |
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Page vii
... Divine Poetry and Drama in Sixteenth Century England ( Berkeley , University of California Press , 1959 ) should also be included , for it leads towards Pro- fessor Burton O. Kurth's approach to the poem through seventeenth century ...
... Divine Poetry and Drama in Sixteenth Century England ( Berkeley , University of California Press , 1959 ) should also be included , for it leads towards Pro- fessor Burton O. Kurth's approach to the poem through seventeenth century ...
Page xvi
... Divine Weeks of the French Calvinist poet Guillaume Salluste Sieur du Bartas , which was more popular in the English translation of Joshua Sylvester that Milton knew as a child than the original ever was in France . Creation was the ...
... Divine Weeks of the French Calvinist poet Guillaume Salluste Sieur du Bartas , which was more popular in the English translation of Joshua Sylvester that Milton knew as a child than the original ever was in France . Creation was the ...
Page xvii
... divine love in its more than successful effort to repair the harm done in Eden . 6. When Milton returned to London from his Italian tour in the summer of 1639 he may have already been meditating plans for some biblical dramas like those ...
... divine love in its more than successful effort to repair the harm done in Eden . 6. When Milton returned to London from his Italian tour in the summer of 1639 he may have already been meditating plans for some biblical dramas like those ...
Page xxi
... divine light went out of the Devils , they . . . became like Serpents , Dragons , Wormes , and evill Beasts : as may be seen by Adam's Serpent . " 16. But Milton was too much a humanist and at the same time too much interested in the ...
... divine light went out of the Devils , they . . . became like Serpents , Dragons , Wormes , and evill Beasts : as may be seen by Adam's Serpent . " 16. But Milton was too much a humanist and at the same time too much interested in the ...
Page xxv
... divine origin of all matter implied the indestructibility of its substance if not of its forms ) . That is why Satan assures the demons that their " Empyreal substance cannot fail " ( I , 117 ) , or — in other words that they are ...
... divine origin of all matter implied the indestructibility of its substance if not of its forms ) . That is why Satan assures the demons that their " Empyreal substance cannot fail " ( I , 117 ) , or — in other words that they are ...
Contents
XI | 1 |
XII | 5 |
XIII | 30 |
XIV | 60 |
XV | 83 |
XVI | 113 |
XVII | 138 |
XVIII | 163 |
XIX | 183 |
XX | 202 |
XXI | 234 |
XXII | 265 |
XXIII | 290 |
XXIV | 309 |
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Common terms and phrases
Adam Adam and Eve Adam's Aeneid angels appear'd Areopagitica battle in Heaven Beast Beelzebub behold Belial bliss Book bright C. S. Lewis C.Ed call'd Celestial Chaos Cherubim Cloud Comus creation Creatures dark Death deep devils Divine Du Bartas dwell Earth Eternal Ev'ning evil eyes fair Faith fall Father fire Flow'rs Fruit Gates Genesis glory God's Gods grace ground hand happy hath Heav'n heav'nly Hell Hesiod highth Hill John Milton keeps its Latin King Latin Latin meaning light live Lord Nature Night Ovid Paradise Lost passage poem Psalm rais'd Raphael repli'd return'd Satan says seem'd Serpent sight soon spake Spirits stars stood sweet taste thee thence things thir thou hast thought Throne Timaeus tradition Tree turn'd VIII virtue wings words World Zeus