The Poetical Works of John MiltonPhillips, Samson,, 1854 - 748 Seiten |
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Seite xvii
... invention could have invested with the same dignity ; when even chivalry had not yet arrived at its historic grandeur , and when every- thing must have had a fabulousness which shocked probability . This is the more extraordinary ...
... invention could have invested with the same dignity ; when even chivalry had not yet arrived at its historic grandeur , and when every- thing must have had a fabulousness which shocked probability . This is the more extraordinary ...
Seite xxii
... invention display themselves " much in the " Elegies . " I suspect that the greater part of them might have been by any classical scholar of lively talents , rich in learning , and practised in con- versation . Not so " Ad Patrem " or ...
... invention display themselves " much in the " Elegies . " I suspect that the greater part of them might have been by any classical scholar of lively talents , rich in learning , and practised in con- versation . Not so " Ad Patrem " or ...
Seite xxiii
... inventions . Shakspeare enters into the souls of others . Spenser brings them upon the stage in groups , in all the allegori- cal fabulousness of their outward forms . He is the painter of the times of chivalry , moralized into fictions ...
... inventions . Shakspeare enters into the souls of others . Spenser brings them upon the stage in groups , in all the allegori- cal fabulousness of their outward forms . He is the painter of the times of chivalry , moralized into fictions ...
Seite xxiv
... invention ; and hence Milton seems to make a very pertinent and natural transition to Spenser , whose Faery Queene , ' although it externally professes to treat of tournaments and the trophies of knightly valour , of forests drear and ...
... invention ; and hence Milton seems to make a very pertinent and natural transition to Spenser , whose Faery Queene , ' although it externally professes to treat of tournaments and the trophies of knightly valour , of forests drear and ...
Seite xxvii
... invention there is in this poem ? There is invention in the epithets , in the combinations , in the descriptions , in the apostrophes , in the vision- ary parts of the poem , in the sorrows , the predictions , and the consolations : in ...
... invention there is in this poem ? There is invention in the epithets , in the combinations , in the descriptions , in the apostrophes , in the vision- ary parts of the poem , in the sorrows , the predictions , and the consolations : in ...
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Adam Adam and Eve admiration ancient angels appears beautiful behold Belial character Comus Countess of Derby dark death deep delight described divine dreadful earth Euripides evil expression eyes fable father fire genius glory gods grace happy hath heart heaven heavenly hell holy Homer honour human Iliad imagery images imagination infernal invention John Milton Johnson Joseph Warton king labour language Latin learning less light lived Lord Lycidas mighty Milton mind moral Muse nature never Newton night o'er observes Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage passions perhaps poem poet poet's poetical poetry praise racter reader Samson Samson Agonistes Satan Saviour says Scripture seem'd seems sentiments Shakspeare sight spake speaking speech Spenser spirit stood strength sublime Tasso taste thee thence thine things thought throne Thyer truth verse Virgil virtue voice Warton whole wings wisdom words