Milton and His Poetry |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 11
Seite 26
III Say , heav'nly Muse , shall not thy sacred vein Afford a present to the Infant - God ? Hast thou no verse , no hymn or solemn strain , To welcome Him to this His new abode , Now while the heav'n , by the Sun's team untrod ...
III Say , heav'nly Muse , shall not thy sacred vein Afford a present to the Infant - God ? Hast thou no verse , no hymn or solemn strain , To welcome Him to this His new abode , Now while the heav'n , by the Sun's team untrod ...
Seite 42
... or by the vague lovelonging which comes so easily to youth , and that he is not feigning emotion or speaking with accents of mere convention when he describes himself as , for the moment , servant alike of the Muse and of Love .
... or by the vague lovelonging which comes so easily to youth , and that he is not feigning emotion or speaking with accents of mere convention when he describes himself as , for the moment , servant alike of the Muse and of Love .
Seite 43
... As thou from year to year hast sung too late For my relief , yet hadst no reason why : Whether the Muse , or Love , call thee his mate , Both them I serve , and of their train am I. We are probably safe in assigning this sonnet to ...
... As thou from year to year hast sung too late For my relief , yet hadst no reason why : Whether the Muse , or Love , call thee his mate , Both them I serve , and of their train am I. We are probably safe in assigning this sonnet to ...
Seite 79
I'll tell ye ; ' tis not vain or fabulous ( Though so esteemed by shallow ignorance ) , What the sage poets , taught by th ' Heav'nly Muse , Storied of old , in high immortal verse , Of dire chimeras , and enchanted isles , And rifted ...
I'll tell ye ; ' tis not vain or fabulous ( Though so esteemed by shallow ignorance ) , What the sage poets , taught by th ' Heav'nly Muse , Storied of old , in high immortal verse , Of dire chimeras , and enchanted isles , And rifted ...
Seite 103
Hence with denial vain , and coy excuse : So may some gentle Muse With lucky words favour my destined urn ; 1 Lycidas is the name of a shepherd in Virgil's ninth Eclogue . • This explanatory note was added by Milton in the first edition ...
Hence with denial vain , and coy excuse : So may some gentle Muse With lucky words favour my destined urn ; 1 Lycidas is the name of a shepherd in Virgil's ninth Eclogue . • This explanatory note was added by Milton in the first edition ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
already Angel appear beauty beginning blind bring called cause character Church clear close Comus course dark daughter early England English enter evil eyes fact fair faith feel followed genius give hand hath Heav'n human influence interest Italy keep king Lady later learning leave less light lines literature live look matter mean Milton mind moral Muse nature never night once Paradise Lost pass passage peace perhaps poem poet poetic POETRY political present pure Puritan reference regarded religious remaining Restoration seems shepherd side sing Smectymnuus song soon soul spirit sweet task tell temper thee things thou thought took true turn virtue write written young youth