Milton and His Poetry |
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Seite 16
Their co - operation had much to do with the essential greatness of our Elizabethan literature , in which , as in no other body of literature belonging to the same period , a passionate love of beauty is combined with religious fervour ...
Their co - operation had much to do with the essential greatness of our Elizabethan literature , in which , as in no other body of literature belonging to the same period , a passionate love of beauty is combined with religious fervour ...
Seite 22
Chiefly on account of the fairness of his complexion and his personal beauty , but also undoubtedly in part because of the purity of his life and conversation , he was dubbed by his college companions “ the Lady " -a nickname which ...
Chiefly on account of the fairness of his complexion and his personal beauty , but also undoubtedly in part because of the purity of his life and conversation , he was dubbed by his college companions “ the Lady " -a nickname which ...
Seite 23
Under the form of pastoral allegory , Milton himself in his “ Lycidas , ' ' to be quoted presently , also speaks , in a passage of supreme beauty , of his life at Cambridge . It was now that his poetic impulse really awoke , and during ...
Under the form of pastoral allegory , Milton himself in his “ Lycidas , ' ' to be quoted presently , also speaks , in a passage of supreme beauty , of his life at Cambridge . It was now that his poetic impulse really awoke , and during ...
Seite 36
fact that in him this Hebraic zeal for righteousness was combined with a 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 ...
fact that in him this Hebraic zeal for righteousness was combined with a 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 ...
Seite 43
For the mere enjoyment of these poems in all the beauty of their descriptions and the rare felicity of their diction and versification little preliminary explanation is called for . Every reader will note for himself that , though each ...
For the mere enjoyment of these poems in all the beauty of their descriptions and the rare felicity of their diction and versification little preliminary explanation is called for . Every reader will note for himself that , though each ...
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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