Miltonic$508579$ - significado y definición. Qué es Miltonic$508579$
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Qué (quién) es Miltonic$508579$ - definición

METER DEVISED BY ROBERT BRIDGES
Neo-Miltonic Syllabics

Neo-Miltonic syllabics         
Neo-Miltonic Syllabics is a meter devised by Robert Bridges. It was first employed by the poet in a group of poems composed between 1921 and 1925, and collected in his book New Verse (1925).
Miltonic         
  • p=32}}</ref>
  • Title page of John Milton's 1644 edition of ''[[Areopagitica]]''
  • Title page of the 1644 edition of ''[[Areopagitica]]''
  • [[Engraving]] by [[William Faithorne]], 1670
  • Commemorative blue plaque 'John Milton lived here 1632–1638' at Berkyn Manor Farm, [[Horton, Berkshire]]
  • Blue plaque on London's Bread Street, commemorating Milton's birthplace
  • Portrait of Milton at age 10 in [[Milton's Cottage]], [[Chalfont St Giles]] painted by [[Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen]]
  • Title page of a 1752–1761 edition of "The Poetical Works of John Milton with Notes of Various Authors by Thomas Newton" printed by J. & R. Tonson in the Strand
  • Frontispiece]] to ''[[Milton: A Poem in Two Books]]''
  • ''Milton Dictates the Lost Paradise to His Three Daughters'', ca. 1826, by [[Eugène Delacroix]]
  • Stowe]], Buckinghamshire
ENGLISH POET AND CIVIL SERVANT (1608–1674)
John milton; J. Milton; Milton, John; Miltonic; Post-Miltonic; Miltonist; Miltonists; Milton, J.; Katherine Woodcock; Miltonesque; Miltonian; Giovanni Milton; Joannis Miltoni; Milton, John, 1608-1674
·adj Of, pertaining to, or resembling, Milton, or his writings; as, Miltonic prose.
Miltonian         
  • p=32}}</ref>
  • Title page of John Milton's 1644 edition of ''[[Areopagitica]]''
  • Title page of the 1644 edition of ''[[Areopagitica]]''
  • [[Engraving]] by [[William Faithorne]], 1670
  • Commemorative blue plaque 'John Milton lived here 1632–1638' at Berkyn Manor Farm, [[Horton, Berkshire]]
  • Blue plaque on London's Bread Street, commemorating Milton's birthplace
  • Portrait of Milton at age 10 in [[Milton's Cottage]], [[Chalfont St Giles]] painted by [[Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen]]
  • Title page of a 1752–1761 edition of "The Poetical Works of John Milton with Notes of Various Authors by Thomas Newton" printed by J. & R. Tonson in the Strand
  • Frontispiece]] to ''[[Milton: A Poem in Two Books]]''
  • ''Milton Dictates the Lost Paradise to His Three Daughters'', ca. 1826, by [[Eugène Delacroix]]
  • Stowe]], Buckinghamshire
ENGLISH POET AND CIVIL SERVANT (1608–1674)
John milton; J. Milton; Milton, John; Miltonic; Post-Miltonic; Miltonist; Miltonists; Milton, J.; Katherine Woodcock; Miltonesque; Miltonian; Giovanni Milton; Joannis Miltoni; Milton, John, 1608-1674
·adj Miltonic.

Wikipedia

Neo-Miltonic syllabics

Neo-Miltonic Syllabics is a meter devised by Robert Bridges. It was first employed by the poet in a group of poems composed between 1921 and 1925, and collected in his book New Verse (1925). In "Kate's Mother," included in New Verse, Bridges had found that form which he later employed in The Testament of Beauty, a book-length poem written when he was over eighty. He arrived at that syllabic meter used in the New Verse collection by way of his earlier detailed analysis of John Milton's versification in Milton's Prosody (1889, rev. ed. 1921).

The first poem in this form was "Poor Poll" which F. T. Prince regarded as the best illustration of Bridges' meter. Prince later adopted Neo-Miltonic Syllabics when writing his own work, Afterword on Rupert Brooke (1976).