George Eliot's Dialogue with John MiltonUniversity of Missouri Press, 2003 - 278 Seiten "In George Eliot's Dialogue with John Milton, Anna K. Nardo details how Eliot reimagined Milton's life and art to write epic novels for an age of unbelief. Nardo demonstrates that Eliot directly engaged Milton's poetry, prose, and the well-known legends of his life - transposing, reframing, regendering, and thus testing both the stories told about Milton and the stories Milton told."--BOOK JACKET. |
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Seite 3
... learned while dress- ing” (GEL, 1:36); in an 1846 note to her Coventry friends the Brays, she quotes “L'Allegro” (28): “Don't bring us any bad news or any pains, but only nods and becks and wreathed smiles” (GEL, 1:219); and in an 1840 ...
... learned while dress- ing” (GEL, 1:36); in an 1846 note to her Coventry friends the Brays, she quotes “L'Allegro” (28): “Don't bring us any bad news or any pains, but only nods and becks and wreathed smiles” (GEL, 1:219); and in an 1840 ...
Seite 5
... adept at catching fish and rats , but so bewildered by Latin verbs — chafes at just the kind of learned drudgery against which Milton inveighs in Of Education : For the usual method of teaching arts, I deem it Introduction 5.
... adept at catching fish and rats , but so bewildered by Latin verbs — chafes at just the kind of learned drudgery against which Milton inveighs in Of Education : For the usual method of teaching arts, I deem it Introduction 5.
Seite 21
... learned where to register the “ fable of Cupid and Psyche ” in his rows of notebooks — as “ the romantic invention of a literary period , ” not “ a genuine mythical product ” —but not how to feel on his honeymoon the power and passion ...
... learned where to register the “ fable of Cupid and Psyche ” in his rows of notebooks — as “ the romantic invention of a literary period , ” not “ a genuine mythical product ” —but not how to feel on his honeymoon the power and passion ...
Seite 58
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Inhalt
27 | |
Milton and Romolas Fathers | 66 |
Milton and Dorotheas Husbands | 83 |
Testing the Ways of Milton in Middlemarch | 111 |
Eliots Challenge to Milton in Adam Bede | 135 |
The Freedom of My Mind | 166 |
A Wider Vision | 189 |
Great Benefactors of Mankind Deliverers | 216 |
Conclusion | 247 |
Bibliography | 261 |
Index | 275 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adam and Eve Adam Bede Adam's allusion angel Areopagitica Bardo beauty become blind Casaubon characters choice chooses Christian Comus Corinne critics critique Daniel Deronda daughters death Deborah dialogue Dinah domestic Dorothea early Eliot's narrator enchanted epic erotic Essays Esther Eve's evil fantasy father feels Felix Holt Fiction Floss gaze George Eliot Grandcourt Gubar Gwendolen Gypsy hero heroine heroism Hetty Hetty's husband ideal imagines ironic John Milton Keightley Knoepflmacher knowledge Lady language learned legend live Lydgate Lydgate's Maggie Maggie's marriage married Mary Ann Middlemarch Mill mind Mirah never nineteenth-century novel Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passion pastoral pattern poem poet poetry Poyser Puritan reader reading Milton rejects rescue Romola Rosamond Rufus Rufus's Samson Samson Agonistes Satan Savonarola scene scholarly seems soul Stephen story struggle temptation Thomas à Kempis thou tion Transome trial truth Victorian vision Whereas wife Will's woman women young