A Milton HandbookF. S. Crofts & Company, 1954 - 465 pages |
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Page 2
... Finally , and this perhaps is most important of all , Mil- ton was intensely concerned to have his own image stand . in the public eye as he himself conceived it . He inherited the Renaissance thirst for enduring fame and he com- bined ...
... Finally , and this perhaps is most important of all , Mil- ton was intensely concerned to have his own image stand . in the public eye as he himself conceived it . He inherited the Renaissance thirst for enduring fame and he com- bined ...
Page 21
... finally learn ( which is yet the highest matter ) to know itself , and at the same time those holy minds and intelligences with whom hereafter it is to enter into ever- lasting companionship . Prolusiones Oratoriae III , Masson's ...
... finally learn ( which is yet the highest matter ) to know itself , and at the same time those holy minds and intelligences with whom hereafter it is to enter into ever- lasting companionship . Prolusiones Oratoriae III , Masson's ...
Page 144
... finally , in the poem important anticipations of motives later to be employed in Paradise Lost . Thus the idea that the Pagan divinities are in reality demons , suggested in stanzas XXIV - XXV , is the basic principle of the ...
... finally , in the poem important anticipations of motives later to be employed in Paradise Lost . Thus the idea that the Pagan divinities are in reality demons , suggested in stanzas XXIV - XXV , is the basic principle of the ...
Contents
CHAPTER | 1 |
I | 117 |
PARADISE REGAINED AND SAMSON AGONISTES | 268 |
Copyright | |
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Adam Adam and Eve Adam's ancient angels Areopagitica blank verse Book Cambridge Chorus Christ Christian church classical Columbia Edition Comus death Defense Diodati discussion divine divorce doctrine drama edition Edward Phillips eighteenth century elaborate elegy English epic evidence expression Fletcher Greek Heaven Horton period human idea Il Penseroso influence interest interpretation Italian Italy John Milton King L'Allegro later Latin learned letter liberty lines literary literature London Lycidas manuscript masque Masson material ment mind modern moral nature original pamphlet Paradise Lost Paradise Regained parallel Parliament passage passion philosophy poem poet poet's poetic poetry political printed prose published Puritan reason Reformation religious Renaissance Samson Agonistes Satan Saurat says Scripture seventeenth century Shakespeare similes Smectymnuus sonnets Spenser spirit statement style suggestion theme theological thought Tillyard tion ton's tract tradition translation University writing written