Milton & His PoetryG. G. Harrap, 1918 - 183 Seiten |
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Seite 12
... true , was strongly hostile to Puri- tanism , and sought by every means in her power to prevent its progress . In this she failed . But at the close of her reign the spirit of reasonableness and tolerance was abroad in the Church ...
... true , was strongly hostile to Puri- tanism , and sought by every means in her power to prevent its progress . In this she failed . But at the close of her reign the spirit of reasonableness and tolerance was abroad in the Church ...
Seite 34
... true , Can in His swaddling - bands control the damnèd crew . So , when the Sun in bed , XXVI Curtained with cloudy red , Pillows his chin upon an orient wave , The flocking shadows pale Troop to th ' infernal jail , Each fettered ghost ...
... true , Can in His swaddling - bands control the damnèd crew . So , when the Sun in bed , XXVI Curtained with cloudy red , Pillows his chin upon an orient wave , The flocking shadows pale Troop to th ' infernal jail , Each fettered ghost ...
Seite 36
... true Hellenic feeling for beauty and love of knowledge . The Hebrew and the Hellene , as we may therefore say , were always present together in Milton's poetry ; but they were present in very different proportions at different stages of ...
... true Hellenic feeling for beauty and love of knowledge . The Hebrew and the Hellene , as we may therefore say , were always present together in Milton's poetry ; but they were present in very different proportions at different stages of ...
Seite 39
... true calling , is evident ; nor is it less evident that he had already a strong conviction of his fast - growing powers ; he knew nothing of false modesty , and again and again in autobio- graphical passages in his writings his superb ...
... true calling , is evident ; nor is it less evident that he had already a strong conviction of his fast - growing powers ; he knew nothing of false modesty , and again and again in autobio- graphical passages in his writings his superb ...
Seite 41
... true that he often abused his scholarship . But let us understand how it came to be so distinctive a feature of his poetic work . His mind was literally stored with varied learning , and when this learning was touched and fired by the ...
... true that he often abused his scholarship . But let us understand how it came to be so distinctive a feature of his poetic work . His mind was literally stored with varied learning , and when this learning was touched and fired by the ...
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Æneid Andrew Marvell Angel appear beauty blind called character Chorus Church classical cloud Comus Cromwell dark daughter delight Diodati divine doth Elder elegy England English epic eternal ev'n ev'ry evil eyes fair faith flocks genius Goddess Greek hast hath Heav'n heroic ideal influence inspired interest John Milton king Lady learning liberty light literature live Lycidas Mark Pattison marriage Milton mind moral Muse never night nightly noble Nymph o'er Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage passion pastoral peace Penseroso poem poet poet's poetic POETRY pow'r prose pure Puritan religious remaining Renaissance Restoration Samson Agonistes Shepherd sing Smectymnuus song sonnet soul spirit Stopford Brooke sweet temper thee theme thence things Thomas Ellwood thou thought tion tragedy verse virgin virtue W. H. Hudson wife WILLIAM HENRY HUDSON wing write young youth