MiltonClarendon Press, 1888 - 144 Seiten |
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Seite viii
... praises Milton in noble and appropriate language . With some parts of Milton's character , with his independence and self - reliance especially , he had full sympathy . But he had no sympathy with the aims and the principles which ...
... praises Milton in noble and appropriate language . With some parts of Milton's character , with his independence and self - reliance especially , he had full sympathy . But he had no sympathy with the aims and the principles which ...
Seite ix
... praise to which much of what is called criticism in our time has no pretension . ' ( Macaulay , art . Samuel Johnson ... praises one of Gray's Odes because it is at once rational and poetical . ' He complains that another does not ...
... praise to which much of what is called criticism in our time has no pretension . ' ( Macaulay , art . Samuel Johnson ... praises one of Gray's Odes because it is at once rational and poetical . ' He complains that another does not ...
Seite 3
... praise , but not excited wonder . Many of his elegies appear to have been written in his eighteenth year , by which it appears that he had then read the Roman authors with very nice discernment . I once heard Mr. Hampton , the ...
... praise , but not excited wonder . Many of his elegies appear to have been written in his eighteenth year , by which it appears that he had then read the Roman authors with very nice discernment . I once heard Mr. Hampton , the ...
Seite 8
... praise he was very frugal ; as he set its value high , and considered his mention of a name as a security against the waste of time , and a certain preserva- tion from oblivion . At Florence he could not indeed complain that his merit ...
... praise he was very frugal ; as he set its value high , and considered his mention of a name as a security against the waste of time , and a certain preserva- tion from oblivion . At Florence he could not indeed complain that his merit ...
Seite 20
... man of skill in languages , knowledge of antiquity , and sagacity of emendatory criticism , almost exceeding all hope of human attainment ; and having , by excessive praises , been confirmed in great confidence of 20 LIVES OF THE POETS .
... man of skill in languages , knowledge of antiquity , and sagacity of emendatory criticism , almost exceeding all hope of human attainment ; and having , by excessive praises , been confirmed in great confidence of 20 LIVES OF THE POETS .
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Adam Addison admired Aeschylus afterwards answer appears Areopagitica Aubrey Bishop blank verse C. A. BUCHHEIM C. S. JERRAM censured Chorus Church College Comus Cowley criticism Crown 8vo daughter death Defensio Secunda delight Dryden Edited by C. A. edition of Milton's Editor Edward Phillips Eikon Basilike elegance elegies Ellwood English epic Euripides Fourth Edition friends given by Masson Grammar Greek GUSTAVE MASSON History Homer Introduction and Notes Italian John Milton Johnson King language Latin learning Letters limp Lives Long Parliament Lycidas M.A. Extra fcap M.A. Second Edition M.A. Third Edition Milton's Poems Molière nature opinion pamphlet Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage passion perhaps poet poetical poetry Pope praise Preface prefixed Prose published reader reason regicides rhyme Salmasius Samson Agonistes Satan says seems Selections Smectymnuus sonnets Spectator Spenser stiff covers thought tion Toland tragedy translation treatise Voltaire W. W. SKEAT write written wrote