Complete Poems and Major Prose, Volume 1957TEXTBOOK CONTAINING THE COMPLETE POEMS AND MAJOR PROSE OF JOHN MILTON. |
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Page 198
In Book I he called his Muse simply by that divine name , adding a comparison of her to the nine Muses of classical tradition which implies his belief that the myths of the pagan gods were shadows of the truth in Scripture .
In Book I he called his Muse simply by that divine name , adding a comparison of her to the nine Muses of classical tradition which implies his belief that the myths of the pagan gods were shadows of the truth in Scripture .
Page 476
A Christian working outward from his faith might find the study of Plato and Aristotle profitable enough , but if he were to exchange the direct tradition of revelation for their doctrines , which is what Christ is tempted to do ...
A Christian working outward from his faith might find the study of Plato and Aristotle profitable enough , but if he were to exchange the direct tradition of revelation for their doctrines , which is what Christ is tempted to do ...
Page 541
tradition and that he no less definitely conceived his hero as a prototype of Christ . ... Since Krouse accepts Miss Pope's interpretation of the traditional " triple equation ” between Christ's temptations and those attributed to Adam ...
tradition and that he no less definitely conceived his hero as a prototype of Christ . ... Since Krouse accepts Miss Pope's interpretation of the traditional " triple equation ” between Christ's temptations and those attributed to Adam ...
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LibraryThing Review
User Review - jsburbidge - LibraryThingThis is pretty well the standard edition of Milton, with a critically established text, a reasonable level of apparatus for non-expert readers, and a critical mass of Milton's work extending beyond his major works to everything that anyone who is not a specialist is likely to need. Read full review
LibraryThing Review
User Review - selfcallednowhere - LibraryThingOk, so I didn't read this whole thing, obviously. But I did read "Paradise Lost" and that's the important thing, right? And I actually ended up enjoying it a lot more than I expected to. The language ... Read full review
Contents
Poems | 2 |
Donna leggiadra Beautiful Lady | 53 |
Elegia Septima Elegy VII | 58 |
Copyright | |
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Adam angels authority body bring called callid cause Christ Christian church comes Compare dark death described divine Earth evil eyes fair faith fall Father fear fire follow force give glory God's gods ground hand happy hast hath head heart Heav'n Hell honor hope human Italy John keep kind King knowledge land Latin learned less light lines live look Lord lost meaning Milton mind nature never night notes once Paradise peace perhaps poem reason reference regarded rest Samson Satan says seems song soon soul spirit stand stars stood story thee things thir thou thought tion tradition Tree true truth turn universe VIII virtue