Use Of Classical Models example essay topic
The compass Donne is referring to is the kind someone would use in geometry. The points may be far apart, but they are connected in the center (l: 29). The further apart the points are, the more the compasses legs lean toward each other. She stays in one spot while he traces the path around, and as long as she remains firm, he will return to the same spot he started from.
Milton uses a Classical Model, which is the epic, for the structure of his famous poem Paradise Lost. Paradise Lost has many of the elements that define an epic, which are: it is a long, narrative poem; it follows the exploits of a hero or in this case an anti-hero; it involves warfare and the supernatural; it begins in the midst of the action which is in medias res; with earlier crises in the story brought in later by flashback; and it expresses all these elements using an exalted literary style. Proof of his exalted literary style is his long complex sentences and his use of epic similes. The first 16 lines of this great epic are one sentence.
He also uses epic similes to create an imag of hell in the readers mind. Milton's vision of hell is, A Dungeon horrible, on all sides round / As one great Furnace flam'd, yet from those flames / No light, but rather darkness visible (i: 61-3). Milton also uses classical allusions, for example; he refers to Dante's Inferno ( : 9), when he says, hope never comes (i: 66). He make reference to Aonian mount which is Mount Helicon, home of the Muses, in Greek mythology. He also refers to Ariosto's Orlando Furioso (1: 2) when saying, Things unattempted yet in prose or rhyme (i: 16). Donne and Milton both display the characteristics of the Renaissance in their poetry.
However it could be said that Milton's Paradise Lost is the better example of Renaissance poetry because it shows more of the characteristics and style of the Renaissance.