The Poetical Works of John Milton, Band 1John Macrone, 1835 |
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Seite xv
... considered with reference to originality ' Comus ' ' Lyci- das ' - Johnson's censure of Lycidas ' - His overbearing pe- dantry - Opinions of Johnson's contemporaries on his life of Milton 6 • 254 CHAPTER XXV . Milton's Sonnets ...
... considered with reference to originality ' Comus ' ' Lyci- das ' - Johnson's censure of Lycidas ' - His overbearing pe- dantry - Opinions of Johnson's contemporaries on his life of Milton 6 • 254 CHAPTER XXV . Milton's Sonnets ...
Seite 10
... considered as legitimate classical composi- tions , and are never disgraced with such language and such imagery as Cowley's . Cowley's La- tinity , dictated by an irregular and unrestrained imagination , presents a mode of diction ...
... considered as legitimate classical composi- tions , and are never disgraced with such language and such imagery as Cowley's . Cowley's La- tinity , dictated by an irregular and unrestrained imagination , presents a mode of diction ...
Seite 20
... considered as an early and promising prolusion of the bard's genius to the Paradise Lost . " " In this poem the cave of Phonos ( Murther ) and Prodotes ( Treason ) , with its inhabitants , are finely imagined , and in the style of ...
... considered as an early and promising prolusion of the bard's genius to the Paradise Lost . " " In this poem the cave of Phonos ( Murther ) and Prodotes ( Treason ) , with its inhabitants , are finely imagined , and in the style of ...
Seite 77
... considered as their disgrace . " I will now mention who and whence I am . I was born at London , of an honest family : my father was distinguished by the undeviating in- tegrity of his life ; my mother , by the esteem in which she was ...
... considered as their disgrace . " I will now mention who and whence I am . I was born at London , of an honest family : my father was distinguished by the undeviating in- tegrity of his life ; my mother , by the esteem in which she was ...
Seite 111
... considered kings , than in the gaudy name of majesty , and admire them and their doings as if they breathed not the same breath with other mortal men , I shall make no scruple to take up ( for it seems to be the challenge both of him ...
... considered kings , than in the gaudy name of majesty , and admire them and their doings as if they breathed not the same breath with other mortal men , I shall make no scruple to take up ( for it seems to be the challenge both of him ...
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Addison admiration ancient Andrew Marvell angels appear bard beautiful blind character church Comus Countess of Derby critic daughter defence delight Deodate divine Dryden edition England English epic exalted fable father favour force genius glorious glory Harefield hath heart Heaven honour hope human imagery images imagination invention Italy J. M. W. TURNER John Milton Johnson King L'Allegro labour language Latin learning less liberty lived lofty Lycidas majesty ment mind moral Muse nation native nature never noble observation opinion Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passages passions perhaps persons Petrarch piety poem poet poet's poetical poetry political Pope Powell praise prose published Puritan racter reader rich Samson Samson Agonistes says seems sentiment Shakspeare Smectymnuus solemn Spenser spirit style sublime Tasso taste thee things thou thought tion Tiresias true truth verse vigour virtue Warton whole words write