Paradise lost : an authoritative text, backgrounds and sources, criticism / John Milton ; edited by Scott Elledge.
By: Milton, John
Contributor(s): Elledge, Scott
Material type: 


Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
EWU Library Reserve Section | Non-fiction | 821.4 PAR 1993 (Browse shelf) | C-1 | Not For Loan | 7884 | ||
![]() |
EWU Library | 821.4 PAR (Browse shelf) | C-2 | Available | 911-7885 | |||
![]() |
EWU Library | 821.4 PAR (Browse shelf) | C-3 | Available | 911-7886 | |||
![]() |
EWU Library | 821.4 PAR (Browse shelf) | C-4 | Available | 911-7887 | |||
![]() |
EWU Library Circulation Section | Non-fiction | 821.4 PAR 1993 (Browse shelf) | C-5 | Available | 14703 |
Browsing EWU Library shelves Close shelf browser
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||
821.1 HIC Chaucer and the Canterbury tales : | 821.1 HIC Chaucer and the Canterbury tales : | 821.4 PAR Paradise lost : | 821.4 PAR Paradise lost : | 821.4 PAR Paradise lost : | 821.5 BRA Alexander Pope / | 821.7 ROW William Blake's poetry : |
Includes bibliographical references.
Table of contents The text of Paradise lost --
On Paradise lost / Andrew Marvell --
The verse --
Book I --
Book II --
Book III --
Book IV --
Book V --
Book VI --
Book VII --
Book VIII --
Book IX --
Book X --
Book XI --
Book XII --
Biographical, historical, and literary backgrounds: Political and religious issues in the time of Milton / Isabel Rivers --
A brief life of Milton / David Masson --
A paraphrase on Psalm 114 --
From At a vacation exercise in the college --
Sonnet 7 [How soon hath time, the subtle thief of yout] --
From Of reformation in England --
From The reason of church government urged against prelaty --
From The doctrine and discipline of divorce 1643 --
From The second edition of The doctrine and discipline of divorce 1644 --
From Areopagitica --
Sonnet 15 [Fairfax, whose name in arms through Europe rings] --
Sonnet 16 [Cromwell, our chief of men, who through a cloud] --
Sonnet 19 [When I consider how my light is spent] --
Sonnet 22 [Cyricak, this three years'day these eyes] --
Sonnet 23 [Methought I saw my late espoused saint] --
From The ready and easy way to establish a free cmmonwealth --
From Christian doctrine --
Selections from the Bible: From The book of Genesis --
From The book of Exodus --
From The book of Psalms --
From The book of Isaiah --
From The book of Ezekiel --
From The gospel according to St. Matthew --
From The gospel according to St. Mark --
From The gospel according to St. Luke --
From The gospel according to St. John --
From the Acts of the Apostles --
From The first letter of Paul to the Corinthians --
From The first letter of Paul to Timothy --
From The general epistle of James --
From the Revelation of St. John the divine --
Important concepts and topics in Paradise lost: The universe --
Physiology and psychology --
Reason --
The scale of nature --
Angels --
God --
Freedom --
Covenant --
Knowledge --
The fortunate fall --
Paradise --
Truth and poetry --
Criticism: Great writers on Milton, 1688-1929 --
Epigram on Milton / John Dryden --
Milton / Voltaire. Paradise lost / Samuel Johnson --
From the marriage of heaven and hell / William Blake --
London 1802 / William Wordsworth --
Milton / Samuel Taylor Coleridge --
Milton / John Keats --
Milton / Walter Savage Landor --
Milton / Alfred, Lord Tennyson --
Milton / Matthew Arnold --
Some remarks on Milton / Virginia Woolf --
Recent criticism: The story of all things / Northrop Frye --
Discovery as form in Paradise lost / Stanley Eugene Fish --
Milton's grand style / Christopher Ricks --
Milton and his precursors / Harold Bloom --
The genres of paradise lost: literary genre as a means of accommodation / Barbara Lewalki --
Adam unparadised / Frank Kermode --
Milton's God --
A little look into chaos / Robert M. Adams --
The relevance of Milton / Christopher Hill --
Passion and subordination / James Grantham Turner --
Female autonomy in Milton's sexual poetics / Janet E. Halley.
Summary:
Epic poem describing the creation and the Fall of Man, debating free will, obedience, forbidden knowledge, love, evil, and guilt.
English
There are no comments for this item.