The Poetical Works of John Milton, Band 4John Macrone, 1835 |
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Seite 3
... seems to have been awed by his subject , and to have given less of his own , either of thought , matter , or language : he appears rather the oracle or channel , through which the voice of the Divinity speaks . There is less of human ...
... seems to have been awed by his subject , and to have given less of his own , either of thought , matter , or language : he appears rather the oracle or channel , through which the voice of the Divinity speaks . There is less of human ...
Seite 5
... seems to me , that , in my preliminary remarks upon one of Milton's chief poems , I cannot do better than im- press on the reader the peculiarity of the bard's genius , and endeavour to imbue him with a Miltonic taste ; which is so ...
... seems to me , that , in my preliminary remarks upon one of Milton's chief poems , I cannot do better than im- press on the reader the peculiarity of the bard's genius , and endeavour to imbue him with a Miltonic taste ; which is so ...
Seite 6
... seem ; But herein to our prophets far beneath , As men divinely taught , and better teaching The solid rules of civil government , In their majestick unaffected style , Than all the oratory of Greece and Rome . In them is plainest ...
... seem ; But herein to our prophets far beneath , As men divinely taught , and better teaching The solid rules of civil government , In their majestick unaffected style , Than all the oratory of Greece and Rome . In them is plainest ...
Seite 26
... seems In all his lineaments ; though in his face The glimpses of his Father's glory shine . Ye see our danger on the utmost edge Of hazard , which admits no long debate , But must with something sudden be opposed , ( Not force , but ...
... seems In all his lineaments ; though in his face The glimpses of his Father's glory shine . Ye see our danger on the utmost edge Of hazard , which admits no long debate , But must with something sudden be opposed , ( Not force , but ...
Seite 33
... seem'd , the quest of some stray ewe , 315 Or wither'd sticks to gather , which might serve Against a winter's day , when winds blow keen , " To warm him wet return'd from field at eve , VOL . IV . C He saw approach , who first with ...
... seem'd , the quest of some stray ewe , 315 Or wither'd sticks to gather , which might serve Against a winter's day , when winds blow keen , " To warm him wet return'd from field at eve , VOL . IV . C He saw approach , who first with ...
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admiration Æneid alludes allusion ancient angels argument Asmodai Assyria Athens aught beasts beautiful Belial Bethabara blessed Lord called CALTON captive character Choaspes Christ Cicero Comus David's throne describes desert devil divine DUNSTER earth Euphrates expression Faery Queen father fiend forty days glory hast hath heathen heaven Holy honour human hunger hymns Ibid Israel Jesus John Judea king kingdom language Latin Lord's Milton mind Mount Mount Taurus Nebaioth NEWTON night numbers observes oracles Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parthian passage plain poem poet poetical poetry praise prophet quæ reign replied river Jordan Roman Rome Satan Saviour says scene Scripture seems shades shalt Son of God song spake speech Spenser spirits splendour Strabo sublime suppose Tasso taste tempt temptation tempter thee thence things thou art thought Thyer TODD truth verse Virgil virtue WARTON wilderness wisdom words