MiltonClarendon Press, 1888 - 144 Seiten |
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Seite viii
... readers . He did for Milton what Aristophanes did for Socrates , effaced the real man and replaced him by a distorted and degrading caricature . ' ( Pattison , Milton , p . 219. ) The unfairness of Johnson's account lies in the fact ...
... readers . He did for Milton what Aristophanes did for Socrates , effaced the real man and replaced him by a distorted and degrading caricature . ' ( Pattison , Milton , p . 219. ) The unfairness of Johnson's account lies in the fact ...
Seite x
... reader sickened at the mention of crooks and pipes . Nor was he altogether wrong when he detected a certain lack of genuine affection in Milton's lament for King , for there is far more tenderness in Milton's grief for the loss of his ...
... reader sickened at the mention of crooks and pipes . Nor was he altogether wrong when he detected a certain lack of genuine affection in Milton's lament for King , for there is far more tenderness in Milton's grief for the loss of his ...
Seite xi
... readers of every class think it necessary to be pleased . ' ( Lives of the Poets , ii . 406 ; ed . 1794. ) In his own criticism of Paradise Lost ' he is very often in agreement with Addison . Instances of this , and cases in which their ...
... readers of every class think it necessary to be pleased . ' ( Lives of the Poets , ii . 406 ; ed . 1794. ) In his own criticism of Paradise Lost ' he is very often in agreement with Addison . Instances of this , and cases in which their ...
Seite 13
... readers has ever heard . That in his school , as in everything else which he under - 5 took , he laboured with great diligence , there is no reason for doubting . One part of his method deserves general imitation . He was careful to ...
... readers has ever heard . That in his school , as in everything else which he under - 5 took , he laboured with great diligence , there is no reason for doubting . One part of his method deserves general imitation . He was careful to ...
Seite 44
... readers , it may be 30 sufficient to remark , that the nation had been satisfied from 1623 to 1664 - that is , forty - one years - with only two editions of the works of Shakespeare , which probably did not together make one thousand ...
... readers , it may be 30 sufficient to remark , that the nation had been satisfied from 1623 to 1664 - that is , forty - one years - with only two editions of the works of Shakespeare , which probably did not together make one thousand ...
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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