Milton and the Miltonic Dryden |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 35
Page 26
... comparison with Paradise Lost therefore involve further connections with Biblical literature , with heroic and pastoral poetry , and with other traditions assimilated into Milton's own style . By establishing this comparison , Dryden ...
... comparison with Paradise Lost therefore involve further connections with Biblical literature , with heroic and pastoral poetry , and with other traditions assimilated into Milton's own style . By establishing this comparison , Dryden ...
Page 27
Anne Ferry. for absurd comparisons . We are not surprised to find Dryden in Absalom and Achitophel exploiting for his ... comparison of the King's enemies to Miltonic devils measures the loss of heroic stature even in modern wickedness ...
Anne Ferry. for absurd comparisons . We are not surprised to find Dryden in Absalom and Achitophel exploiting for his ... comparison of the King's enemies to Miltonic devils measures the loss of heroic stature even in modern wickedness ...
Page 34
... comparison . This device Dryden may have learned from Paradise Lost itself , where Milton's presentation of Satan and his followers depends upon an extended comparison with the heroes of the epic tradition . In Absalom and Achitophel ...
... comparison . This device Dryden may have learned from Paradise Lost itself , where Milton's presentation of Satan and his followers depends upon an extended comparison with the heroes of the epic tradition . In Absalom and Achitophel ...
Contents
PART ONE Paradise Lost | 19 |
Satanic Rhetoric | 41 |
The Alterd Stile of Fallen Men | 69 |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Absalom and Achitophel Adam and Eve Adam's Alexas allusion angels Antony and Cleopatra Antony's attitudes Aureng-Zebe Biblical blind characters Chorus claims comparison contrast corruption created Dalila David's death defined divine dramatic poem earlier echoes effect eloquence Essays Eve's example experience expressed Fall fallen world feelings final grace guage hear Heav'n hero hero's heroic human implies innocence interpretation ironic parodies John Dryden language lines literary Love man's manipulation Marcus Antonius metaphor Milton and Dryden Milton's epic moral or theological narrator nature original Paradise Lost parallels passage pastoral pattern phrase play poet poet's poetic poetry political praise present Prevenient Grace qualities reader recognize refer Restoration literature restored Reuben Brower rhetoric Samson Agonistes Satan Satan's speeches satire scene seems sense Shakespeare's silence social society soliloquy sound speak story style suggests sweet temptation thee thir thou tion Tiresias titles tophel traditional unfallen utterance Ventidius verbal words