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Awake, arise or be for ever fallen - Paradise Lost Book 1 - The Uncovered English

Paradise Lost Book - I John Milton "Awake, arise or be for ever fallen." Comment on line Satan says this to the fallen angels lying bewildered on the lack of fire. Satan calls out to them in a loud voice and tries to make them realise the "dire statement" that has overtaken them. He addresses them as princess, rulers, warriors, the first among the angels of Heaven. He asks them if such plight can overcome immortal spirits or they have chosen this place to resg their tired heroism. He also asks if they sworn to worship the conquerer in the humble and low posture. The conqueror God sees Cherub and Seraph roll in the fiery lake with their weapons and flags scattered. Soon His ministers of venegance seeing from the gates of Heaven their advantageous position, will come down and trample on them in their dejected or will pierce through with their thunderbolts ans fasten them to the bottom of this gulf. So, Satan asks them to...

Cruel his eyes, but cast - Paradise Lost Book 1 - The Uncovered English

Paradise Lost Book - I John Milton "... Cruel his eyes, but cast sings of remorse and passionbr Whose eyes are mentioned here? How do they reflect his present state of mind? The eyes of Satan surveying the number, status faces of his armies are mentioned here. They reflect Satan's sorrowful and remorseful state of mind. It pains him to see that countless angels are doomed to suffer everlasting pain in hell. These angels have been deprived of Heaven because of his fault, and stripped of celestial splendours due to his revolt against God. He is overwhelmed with intense emotion at the thought that though the angels have been driven away from the region of bight and joy for his fault, they still remain faithful to him. Thus when he tries to speak to his followers, tears burst forth and stop him from speaking thrice. At last he succeeds in speaking, but his speech is punctuated with sobs. Satan...

Explain the Vallambrosa simile - Paradise Lost Book 1 - The Uncovered English

Paradise Lost Book - I John Milton Explain the Vallambrosa simile. In Vallombrosa simile which occurs in lines 301 - 304 of Paradise Lost Book 1, the fallen angels are compared to autumnal leaves: "... Who lay intranced Thick as autumnal leaves that strow the brooks In Vallombtosa, where the Etrurian shades High over - arched embower;" The word Vallombrosa is derived from Latin 'Valles Umbrosi" which means shady valley. It is a name of a beautiful valley about 18 miles east of Florence where Milton Passed. The fallen angels floated thickly in confusion on the surface of the lake. They looked like the autumnal leaves that fall and lie scattered on the streams in the shady valley of Vallombrosa where shady Tuscan trees from bowers with their high branches arching overhead. These leaves choke the brooks as the fallen angels cover the surface ...

Why is Satan called Infernal Serpent - Paradise Lost Book 1 - The Uncovered English

Paradise Lost Book - I John Milton Why is Satan called Infernal Serpent ? Infernal means hellish or fiendish. The word has its rot in 'inferno' meaning hell, especially with reference to Dante's 'Divine Comedy.' Infernal Serpent thus implies the serpent of hell. Satan assumed the form of a Serpent when he came out of hell to attempt Eve to violate God's command not to eat the fruit of the tree of knowledge of Good and Evil. Eve could not resist the temptation and ate the forbidden fruit. Pursuaded by her, Adam too did so. The son of God descends to Eden and pronounced doom to Adam, Eve and the Serpent. Satan returns to Hell with the news of his success, but suddenly he and his followers are changed into Serpents. The figurative connotation of the term Serpent is treachery..Milton calls Satan as an infernal serpent because Satan tempted Eve in the form of a serpent and was sent bac...

Ambition and prayer comingle - Paradise Lost Book 1 - The Uncovered English

Paradise Lost Book - I John Milton How do ambition and prayer comingle in Milton's invocation in Paradise Lost Book - 1 ? In pursuance of epic convention laid down by Homer and Virgil, Milton begins his Paradise Lost Book - 1 with an invocation of 26 lines. Milton proposes to sing "Of Man's first disobedience" to God in eating the fruit of the forbidden tree in Paradise which brought death to the world and all his sufferings till Jesus Christ restore human being to Paradise. The theme proposed is a grand, mighty and universal one. It represents the origin of sin its consequences and the fight of Good and Evil. Milton insists upon the sublimity of his subject. He aims at soaring not to the middle air but to heaven. He will rise higher than Mount Helican which represents classical poetry and will treat: "Things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme." ...

How does Beelzebub respond to Satan's first speech - Paradise Lost Book 1 - The Uncovered English

Paradise Lost Book - I John Milton How does Beelzebub respond to Satan's first speech Satan's first speech in Paradise Lost Book - 1 is addressed to Beelzebub and meant to rouse him from stupor. In reply to this speech, Beelzebub addressed him as: "O Prince, O chief of many Throned Powers," under his leadership the seraphim fought a dreadful battle against God and emerged God's high suprimacy. Beelzebub visualised the calamitous events which resulted in their disgraceful defeat and their tragic overthrow from the reign of light. Beelzebub hopes that as the mind and the spirit of the fallen angels cannot be conquered, they will soon regain their glory and their happy Heavenly state. He thinks God to be omnipotent who has left them their spirit ajd strength intact, so that they might endure their sufferings to satisfy his wrath. He warns the fallen angels that their unimpaired strength will do them no good of they are destin...

All is not lost - Paradise Lost Book 1 - The Uncovered English

Paradise Lost Book - I John Milton "All is not lost" - What is implied loss? How does the speaker catelogue all that is not lost? Because of his inordinate pride and ambition to rise above God, Satan waged an impious war in heaven. Satan with the rebellious angels suffered a defeat and was expelled from heaven to bottomless pit of hell. Thus the implied loss is Satan's defeat in the war against God and consequent expulsion from heaven. In his frist speech Satan Catalogues What is lost and what is not. He says: "All is not lost, the unquerable will And study of revenge, immortal hate And courage never to submit or yield;" Satann means to say here that it does not matter if he and his followers have lost the battle. Only a battle has been lost. The war has not been lost. They still hate their invincible determinatio...
Page title Answer How do ambition and prayer comingle in Milton's invocation in Paradise Lost Book - 1 ? In pursuance of epic convention laid down by Homer and Virgil, Milton begins his Paradise Lost Book - 1 with an invocation of 26 lines.

Epic Similes - Paradise Lost Book 1 - The Uncovered English

Paradise Lost Book - I John Milton The Epic Similes in Paradise Lost Book 1 are more functional than decorative. Discuss. The most striking feature of Milton's style Paradise Lost Book - 1 is the profuse employment of epic similes. Milton follows in this respect the example of Homer, Virgil, Statius, Lucan, Spenser, Tasso etc and even borrows in some cases Similes already used by these epic predecessors. Where original, His Similes are drawn out of a vast range of studies and cover a wide horizon of human experience. In Book - 1 Similes are not employed for decoration and ornamentation but to provide a subtle internal commentary on characters actions, to give a welcome relief to the reader and to enhance the poetic merit of the poem. Hanford observed "A striking feature of Milton's style is his use of the epic or expanded Simile. These digression are for him a welcome means of pouring forth the treasures o...

Epic Elements - Paradise Lost - The Uncovered English

Paradise Lost Book - I John Milton Question What epic elements do you find in Paradise Lost Book 1? In 'A Glossary of Literary Terms' M.H. Abrams defines epic as "a long verse narrative on a serious subject, total in a formal and elevated style and centered on a heroic or quasi-devine figure on whose actions depends the fate of a tribe, a nation or the human race." Homer's Illiad and Odyssey are the primary epic. Milton's Paradise Lost like Aenied and unlike Illiad is secondary epic as pointed out by C.S. Lewis. Paradise Lost as an epic is classical in form but Christian in theme. Though Milton follows the artistic conventions established by Homer and Virgil; he independently rejects Homeric and Virgilian secular subject to choose a sacred and Biblical theme, the fall of Man. So, the theme of Paradise Lost is "Vaster and more universal human significance than any work handled...

Invocation - Paradise Lost - The Uncovered English

Paradise Lost Book - I John Milton Invocation - Paradise Lost: Book 1 Invocation or exordium is an essential and the first striking characteristic of an epic poetry established by Homer and followed by Virgil. Homer opens the Iliad by proposing the theme:- "Of the wrath of Achilles..." Virgil begins his Aeneid with:- "Arms and the Man I sing" In the persuance of this epic convention Milton begins his Paradise Lost with a statement of the subject "Of Man's first Disobedience..." But Milton's invocation is not a mere following of the convention but truely necessary thing without the creative spirit will not work. Here Milton has converted a pagan epic convention into Christian ornamental at the same time. This is why Cormican says, "The whole of Paradise Lost must be understood in the light of the exordium and the exordium in the light of the whole poem." Mil...

Practice UGC NET English Paper 2 July 2018 - The Uncovered English

Practice UGC NET English Paper 2 July 2018 - The Uncovered English Paper 2 - July 2018 Click on the options 1, 2, 3, 4. Correct Wrong Question 1 Which narrative poem by Lord Tennyson presents the story of a fisherman turned Merchant sailor who, after a shipwreck, is marooned on a desert island ? 1. "Crossing the Bar” 2. "Tithonus” 3. "Enoch Arden” 4. "Maud” Question 2 In “Memorial Verses” Matthew Arnold pays tribute to three great poets. Who are they ? 1. Goethe, Shakespeare, Wordsworth 2. Goethe, Shakespeare, Milton 3. Shakespeare, Milton, Wordsworth 4. Goethe, Wordsworth, Byron Question 3 Who among the following English playwrights wrote screenplays on novels such as Marcel Proust’s In Search of Lost Time, John Fowles’s French Lieutenant’s Woman, and Margaret Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale ? 1. John Arden ...

Practice Previous Question Paper for UGC NET in English - The Uncovered English

Practice Previous Question Paper for UGC NET in English - The Uncovered English Practice Previous Question Paper for NTA UGC NET in English Please Note: This is not the official website of NTA UGC Practice UGC NET English Paper 2 July 2018

Not half so fix'd the Trojan could remain - The Rape of the Lock - The Uncovered English

Not half so fix'd the Trojan could remain - The Rape of the Lock - The Uncovered English The Rape of the Lock Alexander Pope "Not half so fix'd the Trojan could remain, While Anna begg'd and Dido rag'd in vain." Canto 5 Bring out the significance of allusion. The quoted lines are an allusion to one of the episods in Virgil's epic poem Aeneid which contains an account of the adventures of Anenes. The Trojan prince. Aeneas fled from the burning Troy and after various adventures reached carthage, where Dido the queen of Carthage fall in love with him. Aenes stayed at Carthage for some time but ultimately decided to leave Carthage under the order of Jupiter. Dido made a piteous appeal to him not to forsake her. But Aeneds remained fixed. Anna, Dido's sister also failed in her efforts to stop Aenes from leaving Carthage. At last Dido burn...

But anxious cares the pensive nymph oppress'd - The Rape of the Lock - The Uncovered English

But anxious cares the pensive nymph oppress'd - The Rape of the Lock - The Uncovered English The Rape of the Lock Alexander Pope "But anxious cares the pensive nymph oppress'd, And secret passions labour'd in her breast." Who is the 'nymph' ? Why is she pensive ? What are her 'anxious cares' and 'secret passions' ? In these quoted lines the nymph referred to Belinda, the heroine of Pope's 'The Rape Of The Lock.' She is pensive because one of her beautiful and carefully nourished locks has been raped by the person she loves (Baron). Her 'anxious cares' are the oppresive thoughts that after her gone, she will not look so attractive and beautiful as before. Moreover all women will hate as a degrated toast. 'Secret passions' are the conflicting emotions of anger and de...