The Poetic Birth: Milton's Poems of 1645Scolar Press, 1991 - 249 páginas This book offers a reading of most of the poems collected by Milton in his youth and early maturity for Humphrey Moseley's publication of "The Poems of Mr John Milton" in 1645. The edition is examined as a poetic and political manifesto, anticipating many of the ideas more fully discussed in "Paradise Lost". Dr Moseley examines the development of Milton's poetic calling, its origins, authority and national importance, and sets these ideas in their European context. Also explored is Milton's inheritance not only from Classical authors but also from the Italians and Spenser. Dr Moseley then draws attention to the significant structure of the 1645 volume and discusses the manner in which Milton presents material, which was originally written for one audience and context, to another set of readers who knew him as a highly active political figure and who were intended to read this book in the months after the battle of Naseby. A prose translation of all the Latin poems is included. |
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Página 63
... soul of the universe , the way it was made and the way it worked , was musical and mathematical , by music and mathematics men might be brought into tune and harmony with it.18 Such a view of the poet and musician , still current in ...
... soul of the universe , the way it was made and the way it worked , was musical and mathematical , by music and mathematics men might be brought into tune and harmony with it.18 Such a view of the poet and musician , still current in ...
Página 126
... Soul and Body and A Dialogue between The Resolved Soul and Created Pleasure . The irony in the first of those poems is that since man to be man is both soul and body , neither of the extreme positions stated can be right : the reader ...
... Soul and Body and A Dialogue between The Resolved Soul and Created Pleasure . The irony in the first of those poems is that since man to be man is both soul and body , neither of the extreme positions stated can be right : the reader ...
Página 200
... soul . Tempters like Comus think they are serving their own ends when all the time they are being used by the Eternal Wisdom . There have been many attempts to interpret Comus as straight allegory - that is , a form of narrative where ...
... soul . Tempters like Comus think they are serving their own ends when all the time they are being used by the Eternal Wisdom . There have been many attempts to interpret Comus as straight allegory - that is , a form of narrative where ...
Índice
The ceaseless round of study and reading | 20 |
3 | 28 |
and Orpheus | 54 |
Direitos de autor | |
8 outras secções não apresentadas
Palavras e frases frequentes
Aeneid ancient argument audience called Cambridge canzone century chastity Christ Christian Church Classical Comus contemporaries Damon Dante darkness death developed Diodati discussion divine earth echo Eclogue Elegy England English epic example Faerie Queene father glimpse Go home unfed God's gods Greek harmony heaven heavenly holy human hymn idea Il Penseroso important Italian John Milton Jove King L'Allegro Lady language Latin learned lines literary look Lycidas Mansus Marsilio Ficino masque matter Milton mind moral Muses Nativity Ode nature Neoplatonic Orpheus Ovid Paradise Lost paragraph Passion pastoral Penseroso Petrarch philosophical Phoebus Platonic pleasure poem poet poetic poetry political psalms readers Renaissance rhetoric rhyme seems sense serious Shepheardes Calendar shepherds singing Smectymnuus Solemn Music song Sonnet sort soul speech Spenser Spirit stanza stresses structure suggests symbolic Tasso Theocritus things understanding University Press Vergil verse virtue vision visual voice words writing
Referências a este livro
Genre and Ethics: The Education of an Eighteenth-century Critic Edward Tomarken Visualização de excertos - 2002 |
Genre and Ethics: The Education of an Eighteenth-century Critic Edward Tomarken Pré-visualização limitada - 2002 |