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Milton's Satan; a study of his origin and significanceSiemens, Katie January 1953 (has links)
My thesis is a study of the poetic origin of Milton's Satan
and his significance apart from his dramatic function in Paradise Lost
and Paradise Regained.
I have tried to establish Satan's poetic origin by investigating
the studies of a number of prominent critics, Milton's own prose
works, such as the Eikonoklastes and his Second Defence, and also the
correspondences between Satan's speeches and the words of King Charles
I in his Eikon Bazilike. From these studies I have drawn the conclusion
that Milton used King Charles I as he appears in the Eikon Bazilike as
his model for Satan. Since Milton hated the King for his tyranny,
Milton's emotional involvement and the human model resulted in the portrayal
of a Satan, whose vividness and realism make him one of the most
towering Satans in world literature.
Satan's true significance lies in his revelation of Milton's
personality. He reflects Milton's thoughts, his political and religious
philosophy, his attitudes towards contemporary events, and his personality
traits. Milton's development of Satan's personality reveals his
unsurpassed craftsmanship as a poetic artist. As we follow Satan's
career we discover a new Milton, differing enormously from the generally accepted conception of a stern Puritan. The Milton revealed in Satan's
action has a keen appreciate of all that is beautiful in the universe,
besides moral values. He has a sense of humour and a capacity for
friendship, hitherto found incompatible with Milton's retiring character.
Paradise Lost also shows us Milton's hope for the future. In man's
regeneration he looks forward to an England liberated from the tyranny
of kings, while his spiritual vision embraces the realization of God's
initial purpose when he created man; namely, that "Earth be changed to
Heaven, and Heaven to Earth." / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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Mercy through the Ages: A Glance into the Window of Paradise - A Study of Surah al-Rahman with Six Exegeses, Dating from the Tenth to the Twentieth CenturyJanuary 2011 (has links)
This paper explores the distinctions in interpretation of surah al-Rahman of the Holy
Qur’an based on the exegeses of al-Tabari, al-Huwwari, al-Qushayri, al-Qurtubi, al-Jalalayn, and
al-Maraghi. These commentaries range in time period from the late ninth century to the late
twentieth century and are also representative of different modes of thought, such as mainstream,
Sufi, and modernist frameworks. Interpretations also reflect emphasis upon grammatical
explanations or legal issues in some cases. The study first discusses a context for the time and
location of each commentator, whereupon the paper moves into an analysis of the components
and depictions of the surah, or chapter. The final section of the paper illustrates the timelessness
of this surah and its significance to Muslims everywhere. / B.A. Honors Thesis in the Department of Religious Studies, 2011 / Dr. David B. Cook - Rice University Religious Studies
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The epic and tragedy of Paradise lost : together with an appendix ; Samson Agonistes, an internal tragedyDumaresq, William Wayne January 1961 (has links)
Concerning literary theory, this thesis promotes the
view that Milton acceeded to the idea that in literature there
exists a hierarchy of forms (ranging in order of value from
the epic to the tragedy, from the tragedy to the comedy, and
from the comedy to the lyric). The principal consideration
throughout the work is whether the epic or the tragedy is
the highest of all literary forms.
Milton's debt to Plato and Aristotle is discussed, and
his disagreement or agreement with Aristotle's evaluation
of tragedy as superior to the epic is debated. This argument
gives rise to an even wider problem, that of the
relative merits and influences of Platonism and Aristotelianism and how those two forces, sometimes complementary, sometimes
opposed, influenced Milton and the sixteenth-century
Italian critics whom Milton acknowledges as worthy critics
for a poet to follow,
A further chapter is devoted to a fundamental point in
literary theory which arises out of the previous considerations the proper place of the concepts of the general
and the particular in poetry and in art generally. Milton's
own attitude to particularization and generalization is,
of course, the object of the speculation. The argument of
the thesis, following upon this lead, devotes itself for a
chapter to the manner and result of Milton's attitude, as
it is shown by the construction of Paradise host. The consideration of his construction thence leads to what is
probably the key to the understanding of the epic as a
wholes the unequalled accomplishment of the most complete
time-scheme found anywhere in poetry.
The core of the thesis is presented in the consideration of Book IX of Paradise Lost, which is recognized as
the tragedy within the whole epic, self-contained, and
offering therefore itself as the answer to those (like Aristotle) who object to the lack of concentration and the
overly diffuse nature of epics in general,
The final chapter of the thesis points in a new
direction. This question is asked: What is the value of
Paradise Lost? And several of the emotional tests of value
are considered,
because of its integration with the thesis as a
whole, there has been added a consideration of Samson
Agonistes, with special reference to Aristotle, in the form
of an Appendix. / Arts, Faculty of / English, Department of / Graduate
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Arc EntireWhitmus, Kyle J 01 January 2016 (has links)
In any exchange of letters one sister's words must be presented last and the last word is, as you know, most sacred.
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Reading Nature, Reading Eve: Reading Human Nature in John Milton's Paradise LostDunser, Maria Lynn 03 May 2008 (has links)
Renaissance England was a period of tremendous flux; ideas about science, gender and knowledge or how we come to knowledge come under examination. These areas of flux intersect with the text examined here in their relationship to the key concept of nature. In John Milton’s, Paradise Lost, nature appears in various forms over sixty times. By first examining the word nature in relation to the ideas in flux during the period and next examining Milton’s use of the word in the epic, an overlooked yet significant aspect of his epic emerges. Milton uses the mutability of nature to further “justify the ways of God to man.” How his use of nature develops an association between nature and Eve is of even greater significance. In a carnivalesque inversion of the convention of the period, Milton’s development of nature in the poem and his development of the association of Eve with nature reveal an association of Eve with human nature.
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The garden as a metaphor for paradiseAdlard, Michelle Catherine January 2001 (has links)
In this half thesis the use of the garden as a metaphor for paradise has been explored. The English word “ paradise“ was derived from the Greek word “ paradeisos” which in turn was derived from the Old Avestana “ pairi-daeza,” meaning an enclosure. In Ancient Persia the concept applied to an enclosed garden in the modern sense of the word. For this reason the thesis begins with an examination of the development of the garden in this desert region. A more-or-less continuous chain of development in both the physical and allegorical nature of the garden is traced through history from these Ancient Persian beginnings to the height of Mughal architecture (epitomised by the Taj Mahal), by way of the Muslim expansion through Central Asia and Europe. While the core elements of garden design were set in Ancient Persian times, and recur throughout the period studied, the impact of Islam on the local Persian culture brought about a new development of allegorical meaning associated with the garden. This allegorical development reached its apex, too, in the Taj Mahal in which, it is argued, the metaphorical representation of paradise in the garden tomb was made astonishingly explicit. The research for this mini thesis was gathered from secondary sources, including many published books and academic papers, photographic and diagrammatic evidence of extant ancient gardens, and reproductions of carpet designs.
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Periodic Interpretations of Milton's Paradise LostMcCall, Lloyd J. 06 1900 (has links)
The object of this study will be to call attention to the gradually developing interest in the poem and the varying interpretations of it.
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Frail origins : theories of the fall in the age of MiltonPoole, William January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Hunting of birds of paradise and trade in plumes in the Jimi Valley, Western Highlands DistrictHealey, Christopher J. January 1973 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Papua and New Guinea. / Bibliography: leaves 227-233.
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Raphael's poetic instruction in Paradise lostSaylor, Sara Rives 16 November 2010 (has links)
In this essay, I argue that the angel Raphael introduces a poetic sensibility into Paradise in order to provide Adam and Eve with “equipment for living” after the Fall. Unlike other critics who have interpreted Raphael as a poet, I focus on the implications of Raphael’s poetic teaching for postlapsarian life. I also call attention to the dangerous effects of Raphael’s “song,” which awakens Adam’s insatiable curiosity about forbidden subjects even as Raphael cautions him to practice temperance and “be lowly wise.” Raphael aims to both “delight and instruct” his audience through poetic discourse, but Milton shows him struggling as Adam’s delight interferes with the angel’s efforts to instruct him. I discuss Raphael’s attempts to mitigate Adam’s enthrallment at his words through disclaimers that remind him to remain temperate in his pursuit of knowledge and to resist subjection to beauty and pleasure—including the charm of “song.”
Through Raphael’s meditations on the challenges of poetic representation, Milton reflects on the double-sided nature of his own craft. My essay seeks to reconcile the beneficial purpose of Raphael’s visit with its troubling effects. By reading Raphael’s careful efforts to temper and reorient Adam’s curiosity alongside Milton’s statements on the value of literature in Areopagitica, I explore Milton’s sense of how pleasure, doubt, and even temptation—if rightly tempered—can aid fallen humans in the cultivation of faithful obedience. / text
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