| Patrick J. Keane - 2005 - 575 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... | |
| Margaret Kean - 2005 - 173 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| Jason P. Rosenblatt - 2006 - 324 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| John Milton - 2006 - 612 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| John Milton - 2007 - 748 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| John Morley - 2006 - 244 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| 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... | |
| 张智中 - 2006 - 590 páginas
[ Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido. ] | |
| 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... | |
| |