The Poetical Works of John Milton, Band 1William Tegg & Company, 1853 |
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Ergebnisse 6-10 von 58
Seite lii
... Muse , for whom nature had best fitted him , was for a long time forgotten ; and all the crabbed lore of puritanical gloom overshadowed the native fire of a heavenly imagination . In whatever turn his mind took , he had power and force ...
... Muse , for whom nature had best fitted him , was for a long time forgotten ; and all the crabbed lore of puritanical gloom overshadowed the native fire of a heavenly imagination . In whatever turn his mind took , he had power and force ...
Seite lxiii
... Muse can never live , except feebly and languidly , amid material luxuries : she delights in the majesty of thought , the scorn of all sublunary pleasures . The poet , in his long intercourse with the busy world , had , like others ...
... Muse can never live , except feebly and languidly , amid material luxuries : she delights in the majesty of thought , the scorn of all sublunary pleasures . The poet , in his long intercourse with the busy world , had , like others ...
Seite lxx
... Muse are incompatible with serious business . Milton , the greatest of poets , affords a crushing answer to this . In the flower of his manhood , and through middle age , he was a statist , and active man of executive affairs in a ...
... Muse are incompatible with serious business . Milton , the greatest of poets , affords a crushing answer to this . In the flower of his manhood , and through middle age , he was a statist , and active man of executive affairs in a ...
Seite lxxiii
... Muse ; he vowed himself to the Muse . He professed it ; he did not pretend to speak of it as a mere idle amusement , as if he was half ashamed of it : he knew its worth , its dignity , and its difficulties . No one wanting enthusiasm ...
... Muse ; he vowed himself to the Muse . He professed it ; he did not pretend to speak of it as a mere idle amusement , as if he was half ashamed of it : he knew its worth , its dignity , and its difficulties . No one wanting enthusiasm ...
Seite lxxv
... Muse can go . They who have no mirror in their minds to receive and reflect , may be but slightly and dimly touched ; but they must let the rays shine upon them , even as the sun falls upon the barren rocks ; at some happy moment they ...
... Muse can go . They who have no mirror in their minds to receive and reflect , may be but slightly and dimly touched ; but they must let the rays shine upon them , even as the sun falls upon the barren rocks ; at some happy moment they ...
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Adam Adam and Eve admiration Æneid alludes allusion ancient angels appears beautiful behold bright called character cloud Comus dark death delight divine earth Euripides evil expression eyes fable Faery Queen Faithful Shepherdess father fear fire genius give glory gods grace happy hath heart heaven heavenly hell holy Homer honour human imagery images imagination infernal invention John Milton king language learning less light live Lord Lord Brackley Lycidas Milton mind moral Muse nature never Newton night noble observes Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage passions perhaps poem poet poet's poetical poetry praise reader Samson Samson Agonistes Satan Saviour says Scripture seem'd seems sentiments Shakspeare sight song spake speaking speech Spenser spirit stood strength sublime sweet taste thee thence things thought throne Thyer truth verse Virgil virtue WARTON wings words