Answerable Essays on ParadiseU of Minnesota Press - 166 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 8
Página vii
... critical statement . We must always " pretend " to imaginative understanding , for it is only through the actual effort that our imagination may be en- gaged . Nor does " pretending " exclude consciousness of what we are doing . I ...
... critical statement . We must always " pretend " to imaginative understanding , for it is only through the actual effort that our imagination may be en- gaged . Nor does " pretending " exclude consciousness of what we are doing . I ...
Página viii
... critical task is perhaps more like the poet's , to make the past present . I have not tried to be a seventeenth - century reader of Paradise Lost . I have tried to accept my role as a twentieth - century reader who is a student of ...
... critical task is perhaps more like the poet's , to make the past present . I have not tried to be a seventeenth - century reader of Paradise Lost . I have tried to accept my role as a twentieth - century reader who is a student of ...
Página ix
... critical problems and how to approach them -- not for itself but for its usefulness in interpreting Paradise Lost . Perhaps I should say something about the order of these essays . This is the order in which they were conceived and ...
... critical problems and how to approach them -- not for itself but for its usefulness in interpreting Paradise Lost . Perhaps I should say something about the order of these essays . This is the order in which they were conceived and ...
Página 62
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Página 70
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Alcanzaste el límite de visualización de este libro.
Contenido
3 | |
THE WAR IN HEAVEN | 17 |
A NOTE ON HELL | 38 |
THE GARDEN | 52 |
THE FALL | 75 |
ANSWERABLE STYLE | 119 |
NOTES | 163 |
INDEX | 165 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Abdiel accepted action Adam and Eve Adam's angels answerable style archetype argument beauty Beelzebub Belial's burning lake C. S. Lewis commentary complete concept conflict consciousness context created creation creature critical Death demonstration dignity discipline dramatic earth echo elevation epic epic simile Eve's evil expression external F. R. Leavis fall fallen feelings final flesh followers formal freedom Garden God's harmony heaven hell human Idea illusion imitation immediate individual intellect internal irony kind knowledge leader man's material matter meaning ment metaphor Milton Milton's style mind moral myth nature Pandemonium Paradise Lost Paradise Regained pattern of sound perhaps perspective physical Plotinus poem poet poetry problem pure Raphael reason rebels relationship responsibility rhythm ridicule Satan Satan and Adam seems self-knowledge self-love sense sensuous soul speech spirit symbolic T. S. Eliot thee things thir thou tion true upward violation vision whole words