Milton's Epic Voice: The Narrator in Paradise LostHarvard University Press, 1963 - 187 páginas |
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Página 21
... Faerie Queene never sounds like Milton's nor bears at any time the relation to his audience or to the events of his poem that Milton sustains in the tone of the narrative voice throughout Paradise Lost . The passages especially devoted ...
... Faerie Queene never sounds like Milton's nor bears at any time the relation to his audience or to the events of his poem that Milton sustains in the tone of the narrative voice throughout Paradise Lost . The passages especially devoted ...
Página 91
... Faerie Queene begins : It falls me here to write of Chastity , That fairest vertue , farre aboue the rest ; For which what needs me fetch from Faery Forreine ensamples , it to haue exprest ? Sith it is shrined in my Soueraines brest ...
... Faerie Queene begins : It falls me here to write of Chastity , That fairest vertue , farre aboue the rest ; For which what needs me fetch from Faery Forreine ensamples , it to haue exprest ? Sith it is shrined in my Soueraines brest ...
Página 93
... Faerie Queene must be read , even though to the twentieth - century reader , for whom Adam's story is a fable , it may be tempting to think of the concrete meanings of Milton's diction - the apple , the fatal act of eating , Adam whose ...
... Faerie Queene must be read , even though to the twentieth - century reader , for whom Adam's story is a fable , it may be tempting to think of the concrete meanings of Milton's diction - the apple , the fatal act of eating , Adam whose ...
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Términos y frases comunes
abstract meanings Adam and Eve Adam's Fall Adam's story adjective allegory allusions angels Areopagitica argument asso associated beauty bird blind bard characters circle comparisons concrete and abstract contrast created creation critical darkness described device diction divine dramatic Earth elaborate epic introductions Eve's evoke experience express extended similes fables Faerie Queene fallen reader fallen world familiar feel Fortunate Fall God's guage Heaven Hell heroic illumination illustrate images inner light innocence inspired narrator interpretation invocation lines loss Lycidas Milton's epic mortal vision narrative voice narrator's nature noun Paradise Lost particular passage pastoral poetry pattern physical poet poetry qualities Raphael rator reality recognize references reminds sacred metaphors Samson Agonistes Satan scene sense shades shape share song speaker speech Spenser's story structure style syntax thee thir thou throughout the poem tion tone tradition true pastoral world truth unfallen unique unity vision words