Milton's Paradise Lost: Books I and II, كتاب 1Silver, Burdett and Company, 1897 - 80 من الصفحات |
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النتائج 1-5 من 57
الصفحة x
... Satan's address to the Sun , in the beginning of the fourth book , was originally intended to be the commencement of a tragedy . But , as time went on , he changed his mind , and came to the conclusion that an epic poem would be the ...
... Satan's address to the Sun , in the beginning of the fourth book , was originally intended to be the commencement of a tragedy . But , as time went on , he changed his mind , and came to the conclusion that an epic poem would be the ...
الصفحة xiii
... Satan and his war with the faithful angels . These facts are strong evidence against the belief that Paradise Lost as a whole can be founded upon Vondel's drama . As for resemblance in individual passages , the same evidence adduced to ...
... Satan and his war with the faithful angels . These facts are strong evidence against the belief that Paradise Lost as a whole can be founded upon Vondel's drama . As for resemblance in individual passages , the same evidence adduced to ...
الصفحة xxv
... Satan safely to the confines of the newly created world , what a magnificent fragment would have remained ! If he could have preserved the same elevation to the end of his poem , the result would have been an epic that might almost have ...
... Satan safely to the confines of the newly created world , what a magnificent fragment would have remained ! If he could have preserved the same elevation to the end of his poem , the result would have been an epic that might almost have ...
الصفحة xxvi
... Satan , they remain inactive during the whole period of the action of the poem , and eventu- ally , together with their leader , are degraded by being converted into hissing serpents . Even Satan suffers so many rebuffs and repulses ...
... Satan , they remain inactive during the whole period of the action of the poem , and eventu- ally , together with their leader , are degraded by being converted into hissing serpents . Even Satan suffers so many rebuffs and repulses ...
الصفحة xxvii
... Satan his hero . There is certainly some plausible ground for this para- doxical view if we confine our attention to the grand description of Satan given in the first two books . The other fallen angels are majestic figures whose ...
... Satan his hero . There is certainly some plausible ground for this para- doxical view if we confine our attention to the grand description of Satan given in the first two books . The other fallen angels are majestic figures whose ...
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according adjective adverb Aeneid ancient arms army battle Beelzebub Belial bleating burning burning lake called Chaos Cherubim clause Compare darkness death deep Demogorgon derived described devils dread earth Egypt empyreal epic epithet equivalent eternal ethereal expressed fallen angels fear fire first-born flames force glory gods Greek mythology hath Heaven Hell highth hill Homer hope horrid hypallage imitating infernal instance intransitive Israelites Jehovah Keightley king lake Latin Mammon means Milton mind misery modern English Moloch mortal night nominative absolute noun noun sentence object ordinary pain Paradise Lost participle passage passive pathetic fallacy poem poet poetry preposition punishment race rebel angels regarded reign Samson Agonistes Satan seems sense Seraphim sound spear speech Spirits suggests supposed Thammuz thee things thou thought throne thunder transitive verb utter verse Virgil Vondel's wind wings word worse writers zeugma