Literary Milton: Text, Pretext, ContextDiana Benet, Michael Lieb These essays explore the interrelationship of author, reader and text in Milton's works, chiefly Paradise Lost |
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Page 27
... gives firm occasions . for all but two sonnets in what , looking at the final structure we ourselves have produced ... give the " when " more prominence . Yet ( whether or not at the same time ) Milton deleted the manuscript's marginal ...
... gives firm occasions . for all but two sonnets in what , looking at the final structure we ourselves have produced ... give the " when " more prominence . Yet ( whether or not at the same time ) Milton deleted the manuscript's marginal ...
Page 48
... gives them to create more freedom . As these varied representations compete for political credence , they reveal allusion to be a problematic means of securing one's inten- tions . The three writers make coercive allusions to their ...
... gives them to create more freedom . As these varied representations compete for political credence , they reveal allusion to be a problematic means of securing one's inten- tions . The three writers make coercive allusions to their ...
Page 108
... gives us a vision of fallen politics . Satan is a fallen leader , but it does not follow that the political system into which he and his supporters fall is particularly corrupt . The author gives the assembly the dignity of ritual and ...
... gives us a vision of fallen politics . Satan is a fallen leader , but it does not follow that the political system into which he and his supporters fall is particularly corrupt . The author gives the assembly the dignity of ritual and ...
Contents
That Old Man Eloquent | 22 |
The Copious Matter of My Song | 67 |
Hell Satan and the New Politician | 91 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Abraham Cowley Adam and Eve Adam's angels Beelzebub Bellerophon Bellerophon allusion Bible biblical Cambridge Christ Christian Comenius context Council Cowley created creation criticism David death discourses divine Doctrine Duquesne University Dury earth edition English essay fall fallen Father gender Genesis genre God's grace Hartlib Heaven Hell Hobbes human identification interpretation Iobates John Milton king kingship language limina literary Milton Literature London Michael Lieb Milton Quarterly Milton's epic Milton's poem Milton's sonnet misogyny moral Mosaic law myth narrative narrator nature Oxford pamphlets Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage Pauline perspective poet poetic poetry political prelapsarian Princeton prophetic prose Radzinowicz Raphael reader reading Reformation Renaissance Samson Agonistes Samuel Samuel Hartlib Satan Saul Saul's scriptural sense seventeenth century Shawcross soliloquy song sonnet 19 sonnet 23 story suggests thee thir thou tion tracts Tradition truth University Press vision voice woman words writing York
References to this book
The Age of Milton: An Encyclopedia of Major 17th-Century British and ... Alan Hager No preview available - 2004 |