Paradise Lost¡°The greatest epic poem in the English language . . . A work of unparalleled imaginative genius that shapes English literature even now.¡± —Benjamin Ramm, BBC.com Written in blank verse by the seventeenth-century English poet John Milton, this ¡°epic of over 10,000 lines is a dramatic, imaginative version of Satan¡¯s rebellion against God and of Adam and Eve¡¯s eviction from Eden. Set at the beginnings of human history, it shifts us across an expansive universe: Heaven at the top—Earth dangling from it—and Hell at the bottom, a dark gloomy Chaos in between. It tells the story of divine creation, human ambition and hopeless rebellion, but is perhaps most famous for its presentation of Satan, an intensely deep character¡± (New Statesman). ¡°Milton¡¯s cosmos is a visionary unfolding and enfolding of the biblical map with others from his vast mental bookstore. Paradise Lost itself is a densely intertextual amalgam of fictional worlds, made newly brilliant by the imagination behind the poet¡¯s now sightless eyes, embodied in blank verse at its most vigorously muscled. . . . That verse flows, twists, ripples and thunders like a team of miraculously tireless and synchronised horses. It¡¯s the perfect body-mind work-out.¡± —The Guardian |
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LibraryThing Review
»ç¿ëÀÚ ¸®ºä - VivalaErin - LibraryThingThe shortest answer is: John Milton was a poetic genius. PL is so beautiful, you can't help but feel for Adam and Eve. Even Satan is a great character - he so wants to be an epic hero. This poem is a masterpiece, and he wrote it completely blind. Beautiful, absolutely amazing. Àüü ¸®ºä Àбâ
LibraryThing Review
»ç¿ëÀÚ ¸®ºä - StefanY - LibraryThingHistorical significance and beautifully descriptive prose aside, I couldn't get into this book at all. Maybe it's too much familiarity with the plot or the inevitability of the impending doom of the ... Àüü ¸®ºä Àбâ
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