Milton and His Poetry |
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Seite 15
His one absorbing concern was the salvation of his soul , and as this was a matter of infinite difficulty , it called for all his thought and all his effort , for constant watching , incessant prayers , daily and nightly wrestlings with ...
His one absorbing concern was the salvation of his soul , and as this was a matter of infinite difficulty , it called for all his thought and all his effort , for constant watching , incessant prayers , daily and nightly wrestlings with ...
Seite 37
Then follows what has been justly called “ one of the most solemn and beautiful pieces of personal writing in English poetry " —the sonnet , not so named by " Milton himself , who left it nameless , but now generally entitled : ON HIS ...
Then follows what has been justly called “ one of the most solemn and beautiful pieces of personal writing in English poetry " —the sonnet , not so named by " Milton himself , who left it nameless , but now generally entitled : ON HIS ...
Seite 42
It is to these poems of what is commonly called his Horton period that we have now to turn . The list opens with a sonnet as beautiful in its own way as that which had so fittingly closed his Cambridge life , but in character very ...
It is to these poems of what is commonly called his Horton period that we have now to turn . The list opens with a sonnet as beautiful in its own way as that which had so fittingly closed his Cambridge life , but in character very ...
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 ...
Seite 53
The fabled Egyptian king , whom , on account of his universal kaowledge and skill , the Greeks called “ Trismegistus , ” or Thrice . great . • To draw the spirit of Plato down from his heavenly sphere . 2 Sometime let gorgeous Tragedy ...
The fabled Egyptian king , whom , on account of his universal kaowledge and skill , the Greeks called “ Trismegistus , ” or Thrice . great . • To draw the spirit of Plato down from his heavenly sphere . 2 Sometime let gorgeous Tragedy ...
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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