Classic Poetry Series | English | 2004 | 916 pages | File type: PDF | 8 mb
Son of a music composer, Milton began writing poetry at university (he was educated in St Paul's School and Chist's College in Cambridge), where he gained a nickname of "the Lady of Christ's" which attributed to "a certain niceness of nature". Later Milton sought to instrict his audience in a style considered "Miltonic". His central moral belief is in individual responsibility: only when one is allowes choise can one become a moral being.
Milton is a poet of the ear, with a powerful music in his verse. His tremendous learning may complicate his poetry for the modern reader, but there are depths in his lines for those who truly probe them.
Son of a music composer, Milton began writing poetry at university (he was educated in St Paul's School and Chist's College in Cambridge), where he gained a nickname of "the Lady of Christ's" which attributed to "a certain niceness of nature". Later Milton sought to instrict his audience in a style considered "Miltonic". His central moral belief is in individual responsibility: only when one is allowes choise can one become a moral being.
Milton is a poet of the ear, with a powerful music in his verse. His tremendous learning may complicate his poetry for the modern reader, but there are depths in his lines for those who truly probe them.
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