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 xi
... Nature Is Not Subject to Old Age ) Pas The Passion Patrem - Ad patrem ( To His Father ) Peace - Observations on ... Natural History , and Propertius ' Elegies are cited simply by the authors ' names , followed by the appropriate ...
... Nature Is Not Subject to Old Age ) Pas The Passion Patrem - Ad patrem ( To His Father ) Peace - Observations on ... Natural History , and Propertius ' Elegies are cited simply by the authors ' names , followed by the appropriate ...
Page xv
... nature in Books VII and VIII , which should have made Adam proof against the temptation to betray his own nature by disobedience to God's order in Book IX ; the great temptation scenes in that book ; and the hardly less psychologically ...
... nature in Books VII and VIII , which should have made Adam proof against the temptation to betray his own nature by disobedience to God's order in Book IX ; the great temptation scenes in that book ; and the hardly less psychologically ...
Page xvi
... nature and live at will on earth or in Heaven . When Satan wrecks that plan in Book IX the result is the epic struggle for man's redemption in the three following books . For Milton's contemporaries that story had the fascination simply ...
... nature and live at will on earth or in Heaven . When Satan wrecks that plan in Book IX the result is the epic struggle for man's redemption in the three following books . For Milton's contemporaries that story had the fascination simply ...
Page xx
... Nature draw me to my own ; My own in thee ; for what thou art is mine . 12. Everything in the poem , of course , depends on the way in which this speech of Adam's is read . Mr. Waldock has read it as both the most dramatic and the ...
... Nature draw me to my own ; My own in thee ; for what thou art is mine . 12. Everything in the poem , of course , depends on the way in which this speech of Adam's is read . Mr. Waldock has read it as both the most dramatic and the ...
Page xxi
... nature . We hear them in his first speeches to his followers in Book V , and we hear them still echoing in Book X ( 625-27 ) when God speaks of my scornful Enemies That laugh , as if transported with some fit Of Passion . The contrast ...
... nature . We hear them in his first speeches to his followers in Book V , and we hear them still echoing in Book X ( 625-27 ) when God speaks of my scornful Enemies That laugh , as if transported with some fit Of Passion . The contrast ...
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