Poems: The 1645 EdHarcourt, Brace, 1951 - 353 páginas |
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Página 231
... final aspiration of all the pagan otherworldliness the desire for the perfection of natural happiness in some realm beyond nature that is promised in the picture of Venus and Adonis , and the sublimation of that desire in a joyous ideal ...
... final aspiration of all the pagan otherworldliness the desire for the perfection of natural happiness in some realm beyond nature that is promised in the picture of Venus and Adonis , and the sublimation of that desire in a joyous ideal ...
Página 232
... final words on Virginity have already referred us ) is the Marriage of Christ and His Bride ; and the idea of issue from that union , in which the soul is returned to the source and end of all life , cannot be entertained would be ...
... final words on Virginity have already referred us ) is the Marriage of Christ and His Bride ; and the idea of issue from that union , in which the soul is returned to the source and end of all life , cannot be entertained would be ...
Página 252
... final paragraph of " Lycidas . " And in the " defeat " of Comus by the brothers there is a typically Miltonic qualification of the dramatic resolution - no Duessa is unmasked , no foul body is revealed under fair garments , there is no ...
... final paragraph of " Lycidas . " And in the " defeat " of Comus by the brothers there is a typically Miltonic qualification of the dramatic resolution - no Duessa is unmasked , no foul body is revealed under fair garments , there is no ...
Contenido
The Passion | 15 |
Sonnet II Donna leggiadra | 38 |
Comus | 55 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
aesthetic distance allegory Angel Apollo appear Arcades Arethuse argument beauty C. S. Lewis character charm Chastity Christ Christian classical Comus Comus's conventional course Cupid and Psyche Dæmons dance dark death deity divine doctrine doth dramatic earth edition Elder Brother English essay evil eyes fair fantasticks figure goddess gods Grace Greek Hanford harmony hast hath Heav'n Hymn Il Penseroso imagery John Milton Jove kind L'Allegro Lady Lady's light lines Lord Lycidas meaning ment metaphor morning Muses Nativity nature Neo-Platonic night nymphs o're Orpheus pagan Paradise Lost passage pastoral pastoral poetry Penseroso perhaps Phoebus phrase Platonic poem poet poet's poetic poetry praise PSAL reader reference Satan scene sense shepherds simply sing Sirens song sonnet soul speech Spenser Spirit stanza stars suggested Swain sweet symbol tear thee theme thou tion tradition Trinity College verse Virgin Virtue vision wood word