The Poetical Works of John Milton, Band 1John Macrone, 1835 |
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Seite xiii
... moral character- Comparison with Gray - Early Latin poems College ex- ercises , & c . • 183 CHAPTER XVIII . Observations on Milton's poetry continued - Era of his writings - State of literature in Elizabeth's reign - Milton's ...
... moral character- Comparison with Gray - Early Latin poems College ex- ercises , & c . • 183 CHAPTER XVIII . Observations on Milton's poetry continued - Era of his writings - State of literature in Elizabeth's reign - Milton's ...
Seite xxii
... moral . Milton might carry his love of democracy much too far : I , for one , assuredly think so . His defence of the people for their decapitation of Charles I. brings no justification to my mind . But to doubt that he acted on ...
... moral . Milton might carry his love of democracy much too far : I , for one , assuredly think so . His defence of the people for their decapitation of Charles I. brings no justification to my mind . But to doubt that he acted on ...
Seite 41
... moral pathos here ; and moral pathos is assuredly one of the finest spells of poetry . Pathos cannot be produced by a writer who has not a visionary presence of the objects which produce it : but it were better to give more of the ...
... moral pathos here ; and moral pathos is assuredly one of the finest spells of poetry . Pathos cannot be produced by a writer who has not a visionary presence of the objects which produce it : but it were better to give more of the ...
Seite 54
... moral of this poem is very finely summed up in the six concluding lines . The thought contained in the last two might pro- bably be suggested to our author by a passage in the Table of Cebes , ' where Patience and Perse- verance are ...
... moral of this poem is very finely summed up in the six concluding lines . The thought contained in the last two might pro- bably be suggested to our author by a passage in the Table of Cebes , ' where Patience and Perse- verance are ...
Seite 55
... moral of this poem is , indeed , very finely summed up in the six concluding lines , in which , to wind up one of the most elegant productions of his genius , The poet's eye , in a fine frenzy rolling , 6 threw up his last glance to ...
... moral of this poem is , indeed , very finely summed up in the six concluding lines , in which , to wind up one of the most elegant productions of his genius , The poet's eye , in a fine frenzy rolling , 6 threw up his last glance to ...
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Addison admiration ancient Andrew Marvell angels appear bard beautiful blind character Comus Countess of Derby critic Dante daughter delight divine Dryden elegy English enthusiasm epic exalted fable fancy father fiction Forest-hill genius glory grand grandeur Gray hath heart Heaven holy Homer honour human Il Penseroso imagery images imagination intellectual invention J. M. W. TURNER John Milton Johnson Joseph Warton King L'Allegro labour language Latin learning less liberty lived lofty Lycidas majesty ment mind moral Muse native nature never noble observation opinion Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passages passions perhaps person Petrarch picturesque poem poet poet's poetical poetry political Powell praise Puritan racter reader rich Samson Agonistes says seems sentiment Shakspeare solemn Sonnets speaks Spenser spirit style sublime Tasso taste thee things Thomas Warton thou thought tion true truth verse virtue vulgar Warton wisdom words writing