The Poetical Works of John MiltonMacmillan, 1901 - 625 Seiten |
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Seite 1
... nature of his opinions may be guessed from the fact that his first publication , printed in the year of the Restoration , had been entitled " The Rebel's Plea Examined ; or , Mr. Baxter's Judgment concerning the Late War . " A ...
... nature of his opinions may be guessed from the fact that his first publication , printed in the year of the Restoration , had been entitled " The Rebel's Plea Examined ; or , Mr. Baxter's Judgment concerning the Late War . " A ...
Seite 8
... nature could no further go ; To make a third she joined the former two . " Even before these lines were written the habit of comparing Milton with Homer and Virgil , and of wondering whether the highest greatness might not be claimed ...
... nature could no further go ; To make a third she joined the former two . " Even before these lines were written the habit of comparing Milton with Homer and Virgil , and of wondering whether the highest greatness might not be claimed ...
Seite 30
... nature of a triumph . He has succeeded in his enterprise . He has vitiated the new World at its beginning , and he has added it as a conquest to the Hell which had been assigned to him and his for their only proper realm . True , in the ...
... nature of a triumph . He has succeeded in his enterprise . He has vitiated the new World at its beginning , and he has added it as a conquest to the Hell which had been assigned to him and his for their only proper realm . True , in the ...
Seite 31
... nature of the case , a poet must express himself on such subjects not so much in direct propositions addressed to the reason as in figurative conceptions , phantasmagories , or allegories , imagined individually and connectedly in ...
... nature of the case , a poet must express himself on such subjects not so much in direct propositions addressed to the reason as in figurative conceptions , phantasmagories , or allegories , imagined individually and connectedly in ...
Seite 32
... nature of his genius to express it in a Vorstellung . He had faith in this method as that by which the collective soul of man had been impressed and ruled in all ages , and would be impressed and ruled to the end of time . He more than ...
... nature of his genius to express it in a Vorstellung . He had faith in this method as that by which the collective soul of man had been impressed and ruled in all ages , and would be impressed and ruled to the end of time . He more than ...
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Adam Angels arms aught beast behold bliss bright called Cambridge Chaos Chor Christ's College cloud Comus dark death deep delight Diodati divine dread dwell Earth edition Elegy Empyrean English eternal evil eyes fair Father fear friends fruit glory grace hand happy Harefield hath head heard heart Heaven Heavenly Hell Henry Lawes highth hill honour Italian John Milton King labour Lady Latin Lawes light live Long Parliament Lord Ludlow Castle Lycidas masque Milton mind night o'er pain Paradise Lost Paradise Regained perhaps Petty France poem poet praise reign replied round Samson Samson Agonistes Satan seems Serpent shalt sight song Sonnet soon spake Spirit stood Stowmarket sweet taste thee thence thine things thou art thou hast thought throne thyself tree verse virtue voice Westminster Assembly whence wings wonder words