The Poetical Works of John MiltonJ. R. Osgood, 1874 |
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Seite 104
... reader ; all that learning of which the poem is so full has to be detected , and elucidated for the majority of readers by the information they cannot be supposed to have directly at hand . Now , in such a process , every painstaking ...
... reader ; all that learning of which the poem is so full has to be detected , and elucidated for the majority of readers by the information they cannot be supposed to have directly at hand . Now , in such a process , every painstaking ...
Seite 106
... reading Milton , or any other English author , the student ought surely to have an English dictionary beside him ... readings that had crept into the text , something has been gleaned by comparison of the later texts with those of ...
... reading Milton , or any other English author , the student ought surely to have an English dictionary beside him ... readings that had crept into the text , something has been gleaned by comparison of the later texts with those of ...
Seite 108
... reader of Paradise Lost , and are altogether creditable . As Todd has pointed out , he has taken the liberty , in the title to his verses , and in the first line , of making Paradisus feminine , whereas the Greek and Latin writers make ...
... reader of Paradise Lost , and are altogether creditable . As Todd has pointed out , he has taken the liberty , in the title to his verses , and in the first line , of making Paradisus feminine , whereas the Greek and Latin writers make ...
Seite 113
... readers of Paradise Lost , and perhaps of the outcry of some critics , at the novelty of the verse . Meaning mainly to defend his choice of Blank Verse for a poem of such an order , he may have let his expression sweep beyond the exact ...
... readers of Paradise Lost , and perhaps of the outcry of some critics , at the novelty of the verse . Meaning mainly to defend his choice of Blank Verse for a poem of such an order , he may have let his expression sweep beyond the exact ...
Seite 118
... reader will discern a poetical fitness . From this involved construction of the passage , however , results some ... reading . " All is not lost , " Satan is then made to say ; " the unconquer- able will , the study of revenge ...
... reader will discern a poetical fitness . From this involved construction of the passage , however , results some ... reading . " All is not lost , " Satan is then made to say ; " the unconquer- able will , the study of revenge ...
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