[Milton-L] A question about The Argument in Paradise Lost

justin k justin.w.keck at gmail.com
Tue Apr 22 13:08:00 EDT 2008


No my professor, as extra credit, asked me to post this question on the
Milton list.

On Tue, Apr 22, 2008 at 11:48 AM, Justin Kolb <jbkolb at wisc.edu> wrote:

> Hi Justin,
>
> The argument is a traditional part of classical epic and rhetoric, so
> Milton is drawing on long-established models. Why he added it to the second
> edition specifically, I'm not sure off the top of my head.
>
> JBK
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: justin k <justin.w.keck at gmail.com>
> Date: Tuesday, April 22, 2008 10:48 am
> Subject: [Milton-L] A question about The Argument in Paradise Lost
> To: milton-l at lists.richmond.edu
>
>
> > Hello,
> >  I am a first time user and first time student of Milton. I was hoping
> > if any
> >  one might be able to answer a question for me.
> >  I know that Milton, with the intention of giving the reader direction
> > for
> >  his poem, added The Argument to the second edition of Paradise Lost,
> > .
> >  What I would like to know is this.
> >  Within the history of literature, is this the first time a device
> > like The
> >  Argument has been used?
> >  Is it a Miltonic device or has Milton borrow this approach form a
> > past poet
> >  or author.
> >
> >  Thank you,
> >  Justin
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> >  Milton-L mailing list
> >  Milton-L at lists.richmond.edu
> >  Manage your list membership and access list archives at
> http://lists.richmond.edu/mailman/listinfo/milton-l
> >
> _______________________________________________
> Milton-L mailing list
> Milton-L at lists.richmond.edu
> Manage your list membership and access list archives at
> http://lists.richmond.edu/mailman/listinfo/milton-l
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://lists.richmond.edu/pipermail/milton-l/attachments/20080422/a708e07c/attachment.html


More information about the Milton-L mailing list