The Muse's Method: An Introduction to Paradise Lost, Volume 10Chatto & Windus, 1962 - 227 pages |
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Page 25
... concerned with his literary influence . I do not believe that he thought of himself as the founder of a school or as the potential captain of a literary " team . " The peers with whom he was most concerned had been dead for years ...
... concerned with his literary influence . I do not believe that he thought of himself as the founder of a school or as the potential captain of a literary " team . " The peers with whom he was most concerned had been dead for years ...
Page 188
... concerned rising as well as falling , providence as well as sin and death . Granted the personal and dramatic roles ... concern with the very last lines of the poem is sympto- matic of their uneasiness with the final two books . Addison ...
... concerned rising as well as falling , providence as well as sin and death . Granted the personal and dramatic roles ... concern with the very last lines of the poem is sympto- matic of their uneasiness with the final two books . Addison ...
Page 201
... concerned his descendants , Adam has responded to them as if they concerned chiefly his own individual fate . He has conceived of his imperative choice as simply that between the prolonging or the shortening of temporal existence . But ...
... concerned his descendants , Adam has responded to them as if they concerned chiefly his own individual fate . He has conceived of his imperative choice as simply that between the prolonging or the shortening of temporal existence . But ...
Contents
Preface page | ix |
The Beginning | 11 |
Satan Sin and Death | 32 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
action Adam and Eve Adam's already angels appearance assume attempt become begins believe Book cause concerned continue created creation dark Death delight described desire destruction divine doubt Earth eternal Eve's evil expected experience expresses eyes fact fair faith fall fear final follow force freedom Fruit future give God's hand happy hath Heav'n Hell heroic human ignorance imagine immediate inevitably knowledge least less light lines live man's means merely Michael MICHIGAN Milton mind motions move movement nature never once opening Paradise Lost passage passion perceived perfection poem poet possess possible praise present providence question Raphael reader reality reason recognize relation reminded response Satan seems seen sense sexual sight sound speech Spirit thee things thir thou thought true turn universe vision wish