A Companion to MiltonThomas N. Corns John Wiley & Sons, 15 apr 2008 - 544 pagina's The diverse and controversial world of contemporary Milton studies is brought alive in this stimulating Companion.
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Pagina 14
... Adam and Eve, he means to settle the fallen angels. At his first sight of Adam and Eve, he makes clear in soliloquy that he means to use Eden and its inhabitants for his own purposes, that his excursion is about empirebuilding as well ...
... Adam and Eve, he means to settle the fallen angels. At his first sight of Adam and Eve, he makes clear in soliloquy that he means to use Eden and its inhabitants for his own purposes, that his excursion is about empirebuilding as well ...
Pagina 15
... Adam and Eve are expected to cultivate and control their burgeoning garden and their own sometimes wayward impulses and passions; to work out their relationship to God and to each other; and to deal with a constant succession of ...
... Adam and Eve are expected to cultivate and control their burgeoning garden and their own sometimes wayward impulses and passions; to work out their relationship to God and to each other; and to deal with a constant succession of ...
Pagina 16
... Adam show over and over again the few righteous overwhelmed by the many wicked, and the collapse of all attempts to ... Eve learns something of the history to come through dreams, which lead her to recognize her divinely appointed agency in ...
... Adam show over and over again the few righteous overwhelmed by the many wicked, and the collapse of all attempts to ... Eve learns something of the history to come through dreams, which lead her to recognize her divinely appointed agency in ...
Pagina 27
... reliance on the classical, which has governed how he hears. As for the revision of the ten books of 1667. Further Examples from Paradise Lost, Book I Classical Tradition in the Fall of Eve and Adam. The Classical Literary Tradition 27.
... reliance on the classical, which has governed how he hears. As for the revision of the ten books of 1667. Further Examples from Paradise Lost, Book I Classical Tradition in the Fall of Eve and Adam. The Classical Literary Tradition 27.
Pagina 33
... Adam's fall as tragedy and as epic, the two highest genres of mimesis according to Aristotle in the Poetics. For detail here, however, two case ... Eve and Adam Writings References for Further Reading. The Classical Literary Tradition 33.
... Adam's fall as tragedy and as epic, the two highest genres of mimesis according to Aristotle in the Poetics. For detail here, however, two case ... Eve and Adam Writings References for Further Reading. The Classical Literary Tradition 33.
Inhoudsopgave
PART II Politics and Religion | 107 |
PART III Texts | 211 |
PART IV Influences and Reputation | 445 |
PART V Biography | 481 |
Consolidated Bibliography | 499 |
General Index | 521 |
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Abdiel Adam and Eve Adam's allusion angels Areopagitica argued argument Arminian authority baroque biblical bishops Book Calvinist century Charles Christ Christian church classical Comus contemporary court CPW VII critics culture Dalila death divine divorce Doctrine drama early earth edition Eikonoklastes England English epic Eve's Faerie Queene faith Fall fallen genre God's heaven hell human interpretation John John Milton King language Latin liberty lines literary Long Parliament Lycidas masque means Milton monarchy Monck monody moral narrative nature Norbrook obedience pamphlet Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parliament pastoral poem poet poetic poetry polemical political prelapsarian Presbyterians printed prose Protestant puritan radical Raphael readers Readie and Easie reading reason Reformation regicide religious republican Restoration rhetorical Roman royalist Samson Agonistes Satan scripture sense seventeenth-century sexual sonnet Spenser spirit thee thir thou tracts tradition tragedy truth verse virtue voice words writing