The Poetical Works of John Milton, Band 1Bell and Daldy, 1866 - 334 Seiten |
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Seite xiii
... we see at the same time , better than we can see in the English poems , the habitually grave and austere tone of Milton's mind from his earliest youth , - its tendency , on the one hand , to scorn THE LIFE OF MILTON . xiii.
... we see at the same time , better than we can see in the English poems , the habitually grave and austere tone of Milton's mind from his earliest youth , - its tendency , on the one hand , to scorn THE LIFE OF MILTON . xiii.
Seite xv
... mind for which the condition of the Church of England under the ascendency of Laud afforded little chance of satisfaction . Whoever would become a clergyman at that time must , he said , " subscribe slave , and take an oath withal ...
... mind for which the condition of the Church of England under the ascendency of Laud afforded little chance of satisfaction . Whoever would become a clergyman at that time must , he said , " subscribe slave , and take an oath withal ...
Seite xx
... mind in imaginary scenes , inci- dents , and objects of beauty , which remain in the memory as a joy for ever , " what im- agination in the Penseroso and the Allegro , where the poet has collected and woven together with such musical ...
... mind in imaginary scenes , inci- dents , and objects of beauty , which remain in the memory as a joy for ever , " what im- agination in the Penseroso and the Allegro , where the poet has collected and woven together with such musical ...
Seite xxi
... mind should have this poetic tendency to sen- suous embodiment of an ideal kind without hav- ing a fondness for what may be called the actual sensuous , or , in other words , a love of natural beauty and an accurate perception of it ...
... mind should have this poetic tendency to sen- suous embodiment of an ideal kind without hav- ing a fondness for what may be called the actual sensuous , or , in other words , a love of natural beauty and an accurate perception of it ...
Seite xxii
... mind teemed with recollections of them . We do not find in Milton , indeed , that universal retentive- ness of objects and facts of all kinds , from the oddities of street life , up through the beauties of sylvan scenery , to the ...
... mind teemed with recollections of them . We do not find in Milton , indeed , that universal retentive- ness of objects and facts of all kinds , from the oddities of street life , up through the beauties of sylvan scenery , to the ...
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Aldersgate Street Andrew Marvell angels appear'd arm'd arms Aubrey Beaumont's Psyche Bentl blind bliss bright burning lake call'd Chaos Cleombrotus clouds creatures dark daugh daughters DAVID MASSON death deep delight divine dread earth English eternal evil eyes fair father fell fill'd fire flowers gates glory grace hand happy hast hath heaven hell hope imagination infernal King Latin less light literary living Lord Brackley Lycidas Milton ætat mind mortal Newton night o'er Orlando Innamorato Ovid pain pamphlet Paradise Lost Paradise Regained pass'd Petty France pleas'd poem poet poetic poetry polemical prose writings published Puritan rais'd reign revenge round Samson Agonistes Satan says seat seem'd shade shape sight Smectymnuus spake spirits stood sweet Thamyris thee thence things thither thou thoughts throne Todd turn'd verse Vex'd Virg whence wings