Paradise Lost, 1668-1968: Three Centuries of CommentaryEarl Roy Miner, William Moeck, Steven Edward Jablonski The Commentary, the first full version on Paradise Lost since the Richardsons' in 1734, combines numerous resources with features used for the first time. It includes the best commentary from Annotations like Patrick Hume's (1695), to the variorum editions of Newton (1749) and Todd (1801-42), and the modern professional editions culminating in Alastair Fowler's (1968). Other elements include an essay on the early pre-annotative criticism from 1668, including Marvell, Dryden, Dennis, and others; copious use of the OED; numerous cross-references to Milton's other works and passages in Paradise Lost; fourteen excurses and other contributions by the present editors. This Commentary is itself a research library for Paradise Lost. It uniquely presents biblical, classical, and vernacular citations: the ultimate rather than a more recent source is cited, so dating the comment; every cited passage is quoted, and every question is in English. Only a text of the poem is required. Earl Miner is Townsend Martin, Class of 1917, Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Princeton University, William Moeck teaches English at Nassau Community College. Steven Jablonski is a public librari |
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Page 200
[R] IThis allusion to Libra in the Heavens is a beauty not in Homer or Virgil, and
gives this passage a manifest advantage over them. [N] I See 354-55 n. [EM] 998
Astrea. Justice, who frequented the earth during the golden age with other deities
...
[R] IThis allusion to Libra in the Heavens is a beauty not in Homer or Virgil, and
gives this passage a manifest advantage over them. [N] I See 354-55 n. [EM] 998
Astrea. Justice, who frequented the earth during the golden age with other deities
...
Page 309
[R] I "Gothism" in lieu of the "romantic"; the Richardsons too had no named
Middle Ages. [EM] IBy the Moderns [see preceding] as well as by the Ancients,
wars being the principal subject of all the heroic poems from Homer down ...
[R] I "Gothism" in lieu of the "romantic"; the Richardsons too had no named
Middle Ages. [EM] IBy the Moderns [see preceding] as well as by the Ancients,
wars being the principal subject of all the heroic poems from Homer down ...
Page 386
[N, citing Warburton] 646-55 One way a Band . . . th' ensanguind Field / Deserted.
See the driving away of the sheep and oxen and the battle here with Homer, Iliad
1 8.527-33, "But the liers-in-wait, when they saw these coming on, rushed forth ...
[N, citing Warburton] 646-55 One way a Band . . . th' ensanguind Field / Deserted.
See the driving away of the sheep and oxen and the battle here with Homer, Iliad
1 8.527-33, "But the liers-in-wait, when they saw these coming on, rushed forth ...
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