Epic transcending epic Steven poetry "John Milton Lost Paradise" was created during the UK religious revolution. In Milton's word, the theme of this epic is "the first disobedience of mankind" (line 1). In this blank poem, Milton refers to the story of Genesis, Eve is trying to make Adam eat "forbidden fruit". In the first five lines of this verse he stated that the beginning of death, suffering, fruit tree fruit forbidden by human recovery, its deadly preference [b], and all sorrow lost the garden of Eden It was. Until a bigger person loves us and regains the seat of happiness (lines 1 to 5).
John Milton's great epic "Paradise Lost" lost in paradise for the Christian epic was written in the UK between 1640 and 1665 when the Western world changed rapidly. Milton, adhering to traditional Christian faith in his epic, he also combines with ancient epic style to make masterpieces. He chose the collapse of mankind as the theme of his wonderful work to create his own century, this is
Two wonderful epics of England, "Fairy Quin" and "Paradise Lost" have long been criticized as critics. Many critics discussed epic themes and similarities in two British epic, but they are not addressing the deeper and deeper questions perfectly. For example, what is the ontological difference between the main epic (ie Homer) and the second epic (Virgil, Ariosto, Spencer and Milton)? What specific cultural and / or historical factors have influenced these secondary epics? As two books reviewed here will remind us, when defining "Fairy Quinn" or "Lost Paradise" as an epic, it must be an important space and time qualification. Depth and meaning
Both English poets began writing scripts. When Milton announced his epic "Paradise Lost" in 1667, he solved the largest possible theme: the collapse of mankind in the Garden of Eden. By contrast, when Wordsworth wrote his epic in 1850, he wrote 400 pages of "overture" about his inner self-indulgent internal feelings. During the transition between the two writers, the atmosphere of the knowledge of Europe experienced fundamental change for enlightenment. In the Milton era, he can prove the existence of things in the outside world, as God guarantees that things remain stable. But in the days of Wordsworth, Immanuel Kant, one of the greatest philosophers, has been distinguishing things from things with us. This distinction known as Copernicus's philosophical revolution is a very basic today, but it has revolutionized philosophical thinking to show that our mind functions as a filter to perceive information It was.