The Club of Hercules: Studies in the Classical Background of Paradise Lost |
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Page 2
... sense , it was more real to them than their own world , for they had been taught to know the history of Rome better than that of England or modern Europe ; to judge their literature by the stand- ard of Quintilian , and to model their ...
... sense , it was more real to them than their own world , for they had been taught to know the history of Rome better than that of England or modern Europe ; to judge their literature by the stand- ard of Quintilian , and to model their ...
Page 5
... sense was conceived of as a twofold process : the first step was to " analyze " the model in order to ascertain its virtues and the artistic principles underlying them . The second step was to apply these principles in a direct ...
... sense was conceived of as a twofold process : the first step was to " analyze " the model in order to ascertain its virtues and the artistic principles underlying them . The second step was to apply these principles in a direct ...
Page 20
... sense , that they were truly only French words ; at the end of a long and tedious journey I came across a passage that was rich , sublime , and elevated to the very clouds . If I had found the declivity easy and the ascent a little ...
... sense , that they were truly only French words ; at the end of a long and tedious journey I came across a passage that was rich , sublime , and elevated to the very clouds . If I had found the declivity easy and the ascent a little ...
Contents
Chapter One FIT AUDIENCE | 1 |
Chapter Two NOT LESS BUT MORE HEROIC ས ༤ | 40 |
Chapter Four THE VEIL OF INNOCENCE | 67 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Achilles Adam and Eve Adam's Aeneas Aeneid allusion amorous authors beauty bee simile begins blank verse Book of Paradise borrowing Burning Lake Carthage comparison context death describes device Dido Dido's dream Dryden Earth edition editors English epic episode epithet Eve's eyes fact Fall Fallen Angels Fourth Book Georgic glory gods grammar Greek Heaven Hell hero heroic Homer Homer and Virgil Horace Iliad imitation influence innocent Juno Jupiter kind language Latin lines literary London meaning metaphor Milton Criticism mind Mount Ida Neoptolemus note to P.L. numbers Odysseus Odyssey Ovid Paradise Lost parallel passage Phaethon Phoebus phrase poem poet poetic poetry quoted Raphael reader Renaissance rhetorical rhythmical Roman Salmoneus Satan schoolboy sense serpents shore simile spear speech Spenser structure style Tellus thee thir thou tion Tityos tradition translation Trojans Troy Turnus Typhon verbal echo Virgil Virgilian writes Zeus