Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
Sign in
Libros Libros
" And wisdom at one entrance quite shut out. So much the rather thou, celestial Light, Shine inward, and the mind through all her powers Irradiate ; there plant eyes, all mist from thence Purge and disperse, that I may see and tell Of things invisible to... "
The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine - Página 181
editado por - 1892
Vista completa - Acerca de este libro

Emerson, Romanticism, and Intuitive Reason: The Transatlantic "light of All ...

Patrick J. Keane - 2005 - 555 páginas
...responding: the Intimations Ode. Wordsworth, in turn, was borrowing that "celestial light" from Milton ("So much the rather thou celestial Light / Shine...and the mind through all her powers / Irradiate"), to whom it was compensation for the physical blindness that had presented him with "a universal blank...
Vista previa limitada - Acerca de este libro

Romanticism and Religion from William Cowper to Wallace Stevens

Gavin Hopps, Jane Stabler - 2006 - 284 páginas
...invocation to Urania, and also by the conclusion to Milton's invocation to God's light in Book III: 'thou Celestial Light / Shine inward, and the mind...through all her powers / Irradiate, there plant eyes' (11. 51-3). Yet while he may well move his terrain away from a Christian God of light to an entirely...
Vista previa limitada - Acerca de este libro

Love's Pilgrimage: The Holy Journey in English Renaissance Literature

Grace Tiffany - 2006 - 236 páginas
...the salvific instruction of his readers. "[T]he mind through all her powers / Irradiate," he prays, "that I may see and tell / Of things invisible to mortal sight" (3.52-55). Milton saw his own writing as food to be ingested by less enlightened wayfarers; as an evangelical...
Vista previa limitada - Acerca de este libro

The Round Towers of Ireland Or the Mysteries of Freemasonry

Henry O'Brien - 2007 - 537 páginas
...them to that end ; in a question, moreover, where so many adventurers have so miserably miscarried. So much the rather, thou celestial light, Shine inward,...may see and tell Of things invisible to mortal sight *. * Milton. CHAPTER IV. HAVING thus disposed of the word " Clotc-teach/' which Dr. Ledwich so relied...
Vista previa limitada - Acerca de este libro

Poetry and Ecology in the Age of Milton and Marvell

Diane Kelsey McColley - 2007 - 284 páginas
...Universal blank Of Nature's works to me expunged and razed, And wisdom at one entrance quite shut out. So much the rather thou celestial Light Shine inward,...Irradiate, there plant eyes, all mist from thence Purge and dispense, that I may see and tell Of things invisible to mortal sight. [3.37-55] Things visible to...
Vista previa limitada - Acerca de este libro

The Imperfect Friend: Emotion and Rhetoric in Sidney, Milton, and Their Contexts

Wendy Olmsted - 2008 - 313 páginas
..."the book of knowledge fair ... expunged and razed,' calls for 'celestial light' to 'shine inward' that 'I may see and tell /Of things invisible to mortal sight' (III.46-7, 49, 51-2, 54-5). Solitude allows for inspiration, which brings to view its own proper world....
Vista previa limitada - Acerca de este libro




  1. Mi biblioteca
  2. Ayuda
  3. Búsqueda avanzada de libros
  4. Descargar EPUB
  5. Descargar PDF