Milton and His PoetryHarrap, 1914 - 184 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 24
Seite 5
... fact that with the vast majority of young students of literature a living interest in the work of any poet can best be aroused , and an intelligent appreciation of it secured , when it is immediately associated with the character and ...
... fact that with the vast majority of young students of literature a living interest in the work of any poet can best be aroused , and an intelligent appreciation of it secured , when it is immediately associated with the character and ...
Seite 15
... fact of the utmost importance to the student of literary history that , as John Adding- ton Symonds pointed out , " England , alone of European nations , received the influences of both Renaissance and Reformation simul- taneously ...
... fact of the utmost importance to the student of literary history that , as John Adding- ton Symonds pointed out , " England , alone of European nations , received the influences of both Renaissance and Reformation simul- taneously ...
Seite 17
... facts and a constant sense of the intimate relations between the poet and the large public movements of his time are essential to any proper understanding of Milton and his work . T II HOUGH , like Chaucer , Spenser , Ben Jon- son ...
... facts and a constant sense of the intimate relations between the poet and the large public movements of his time are essential to any proper understanding of Milton and his work . T II HOUGH , like Chaucer , Spenser , Ben Jon- son ...
Seite 18
... fact , an accomplished musician and a composer of some standing among his contemporaries ; and his love of music em- braced madrigals as well as psalms . Life in the Bread Street home , while characteristically sober and even a little ...
... fact , an accomplished musician and a composer of some standing among his contemporaries ; and his love of music em- braced madrigals as well as psalms . Life in the Bread Street home , while characteristically sober and even a little ...
Seite 21
... fact that in such lines as those about " the golden - tressèd sun and " the hornèd moon . . . amongst her spangled sisters bright , " he touches the plain simplicity of the original poem with ideas derived from classical mythology and ...
... fact that in such lines as those about " the golden - tressèd sun and " the hornèd moon . . . amongst her spangled sisters bright , " he touches the plain simplicity of the original poem with ideas derived from classical mythology and ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Andrew Marvell Angel appear Areopagitica beauty blind Bunhill Fields called character Chorus Church classical cloud Comus Cromwell dark daughter delight Diodati divine doth Elder elegy England English epic eternal ev'n ev'ry evil eyes fair faith flocks genius Goddess Greek hast hath Heav'n heroic ideal influence inspired interest John Milton king Lady learning liberty light literature live Lycidas Mark Pattison marriage Milton mind moral Muse never night nightly noble Nymph o'er Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage passion pastoral peace Penseroso poem poet poet's poetic POETRY political pow'r prose pure Puritan religious remaining Renaissance Restoration Samson Agonistes shepherd sing Smectymnuus song sonnet soul spirit Stopford Brooke sweet temper thee theme thence things Thomas Ellwood thou thought tion tragedy verse virgin virtue W. H. Hudson wife WILLIAM HENRY HUDSON wing young youth