Paradise Lost (Hughes Edition)Hackett Publishing, 2003 M01 1 - 384 páginas Since its publication by Odyssey Press in 1935, Hughes's richly annotated edition--revised in 1962--remains the preferred text of many instructors. |
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Resultados 1-5 de 60
Página xxxviii
... tree which obviously is a symbol of the Great Chain of Being in Book V , 469-503 , and the very different passage in VII , 168-172 , where the Almighty says to the Son as he rides out on his creative mission into Chaos : Boundless the ...
... tree which obviously is a symbol of the Great Chain of Being in Book V , 469-503 , and the very different passage in VII , 168-172 , where the Almighty says to the Son as he rides out on his creative mission into Chaos : Boundless the ...
Página xxxix
... tree which represents the scale of being in the universe as a whole as well as man's body and mind as a replica or microcosm of nature . Both man and nature are like a tree from whose root Springs lighter the green stalk , from thence ...
... tree which represents the scale of being in the universe as a whole as well as man's body and mind as a replica or microcosm of nature . Both man and nature are like a tree from whose root Springs lighter the green stalk , from thence ...
Página xl
... tree - as Kester Svendsen shows in Milton and Science , pp . 114-116 - was also familiar in contemporary scientific works as various as Mercator's Historia Mundi and Matthew Hale's The Primitive Origination of Mankind , considered ...
... tree - as Kester Svendsen shows in Milton and Science , pp . 114-116 - was also familiar in contemporary scientific works as various as Mercator's Historia Mundi and Matthew Hale's The Primitive Origination of Mankind , considered ...
Página xli
... Tree of Knowledge to Milton's own reasoning against " a fugitive and cloistered virtue " in Areopagitica . For Milton's readers there was no problem for they agreed with Francis Bacon - in the Advancement of Learning VI , 138 that it ...
... Tree of Knowledge to Milton's own reasoning against " a fugitive and cloistered virtue " in Areopagitica . For Milton's readers there was no problem for they agreed with Francis Bacon - in the Advancement of Learning VI , 138 that it ...
Página xlii
... tree of life , which is freely allowed him , dares to take good and evil into his own hands and to speak in his own way of primal matters , instead of bringing his mind and heart into the still- ness of listening and thus into the ...
... tree of life , which is freely allowed him , dares to take good and evil into his own hands and to speak in his own way of primal matters , instead of bringing his mind and heart into the still- ness of listening and thus into the ...
Contenido
XI | 1 |
XII | 5 |
XIII | 30 |
XIV | 60 |
XV | 83 |
XVI | 113 |
XVII | 138 |
XVIII | 163 |
XIX | 183 |
XX | 202 |
XXI | 234 |
XXII | 265 |
XXIII | 290 |
XXIV | 309 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Paradise Lost: A Poem in Twelve Books John Milton,Merritt Yerkes Hughes Sin vista previa disponible - 2003 |
Términos y frases comunes
Adam Adam and Eve Adam's Aeneid angels appear'd Areopagitica battle in Heaven Beast Beelzebub behold Belial bliss Book bright C. S. Lewis C.Ed call'd Celestial Chaos Cherubim Cloud Comus creation Creatures dark Death deep devils Divine Du Bartas dwell Earth Eternal Ev'ning evil eyes fair Faith fall Father fire Flow'rs Fruit Gates Genesis glory God's Gods grace ground hand happy hath Heav'n heav'nly Hell Hesiod highth Hill John Milton keeps its Latin King Latin Latin meaning light live Lord Nature Night Ovid Paradise Lost passage poem Psalm rais'd Raphael repli'd return'd Satan says seem'd Serpent sight soon spake Spirits stars stood sweet taste thee thence things thir thou hast thought Throne Timaeus tradition Tree turn'd VIII virtue wings words World Zeus