The Poetical Works of John Milton, Band 1John Macrone, 1835 |
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Seite xxii
... principles , is to have no faith in human protestations or human virtue . If Milton was a bigoted democrat , Johnson was a most bigoted and blind royalist . There is not a parti- cle of benevolence or candour in this furious and bitter ...
... principles , is to have no faith in human protestations or human virtue . If Milton was a bigoted democrat , Johnson was a most bigoted and blind royalist . There is not a parti- cle of benevolence or candour in this furious and bitter ...
Seite xxvi
... principles of poetry , which I have adopted , -not discovered , —are wrong , or my application of them not just , let it be shown by temperate criticism . I may be mistaken ; but I have not ventured them without a deep and unimpassioned ...
... principles of poetry , which I have adopted , -not discovered , —are wrong , or my application of them not just , let it be shown by temperate criticism . I may be mistaken ; but I have not ventured them without a deep and unimpassioned ...
Seite 3
... principles . His earliest tutor , Young , was a rigid and zealous Puritan ; yet there are many traits in his early taste and early poems which make us hesitate as to his boyish attachment to this sect . His ruling love of poetry and ...
... principles . His earliest tutor , Young , was a rigid and zealous Puritan ; yet there are many traits in his early taste and early poems which make us hesitate as to his boyish attachment to this sect . His ruling love of poetry and ...
Seite 4
... principle , but of talent in the ad- ministration . England had become the laughing- stock of foreign powers : the internal policy was full of vicious abuses : the gentry were discon- tented ; their swords were rusting , and parvenus ...
... principle , but of talent in the ad- ministration . England had become the laughing- stock of foreign powers : the internal policy was full of vicious abuses : the gentry were discon- tented ; their swords were rusting , and parvenus ...
Seite 65
... principles , which would destroy them all to the very root ; but such are the inconsistencies of frail humanity ! Gray saw all these things with equal sensibility and taste , if not with equal genius ; and he re- mained fixed in the ...
... principles , which would destroy them all to the very root ; but such are the inconsistencies of frail humanity ! Gray saw all these things with equal sensibility and taste , if not with equal genius ; and he re- mained fixed in the ...
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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