The Neo-classical Epic, 1650-1720: An Ethical and Historical Interpretation |
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Page 57
An Ethical and Historical Interpretation Tulsi Ram. give the whole truth . It is , in the words of Aldous Huxley an ... gives both good and evil , sweet and bitter . Satan and Dido ( in Dryden ) , sin and passion , or , " the serpent ...
An Ethical and Historical Interpretation Tulsi Ram. give the whole truth . It is , in the words of Aldous Huxley an ... gives both good and evil , sweet and bitter . Satan and Dido ( in Dryden ) , sin and passion , or , " the serpent ...
Page 209
... give o'er , And shake the Purpose of my Soul no more . ( Iliad XXIV , 716-9 ) Pope feels surprised at this sudden outburst of passion in the very midst of its resolution , and explains this seeming discrepancy thus : The Meaning of the ...
... give o'er , And shake the Purpose of my Soul no more . ( Iliad XXIV , 716-9 ) Pope feels surprised at this sudden outburst of passion in the very midst of its resolution , and explains this seeming discrepancy thus : The Meaning of the ...
Page 297
... give us the very sensation not only of the ruin and rout , but also of the confusion and tumult of the angels ' race for life . What is important is the thing creating for itself words beyond the human acquisition , so that the poet is ...
... give us the very sensation not only of the ruin and rout , but also of the confusion and tumult of the angels ' race for life . What is important is the thing creating for itself words beyond the human acquisition , so that the poet is ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 1 |
The Function of the Epic | 45 |
The Evolution of the English Ethical Epic | 87 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accepted according to Pope Achilles Achilles's action Adam and Eve Adam's admiration Aeneas Agamemnon allegory angels Aureng-Zebe beauty believes Briseis celebrated character Christian Columbia Milton Cowley creation critics Davenant Davideis Dedication Dido Diomed divine Dryden Dryden's Aeneis duty English epic poem epic poetry episode Essay eternal ethical evil expression fall fancy fear freedom glory gods Gondibert Greeks Heaven Hector hero heroic play heroic poetry Homer honour Hooker human Ibid ideal imagination implies John Dryden Jove Juno king knowledge language liberty London man's manners mind moral nature neo-classical age neo-classical epic neo-classical poets obedience Paradise Lost passion Patroclus perfect pity pleasure poet's poetic Pope's Iliad Preface Priam prince Raphael reader reason Restoration comedy Satan says seems sense seventeenth century situation soul Spingarn spirit supernatural T.S. Eliot things Tillyard tion tragedy trans translation Trojans Troy truth VIII Virgil virtue words wrath