Milton and His Poetry |
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Seite 13
In the first place , the moral ideals of Puritanism were greatly strengthened and its national significance intensified by the fast - growing flippancy and licentiousness of the Court and the aristocracy .
In the first place , the moral ideals of Puritanism were greatly strengthened and its national significance intensified by the fast - growing flippancy and licentiousness of the Court and the aristocracy .
Seite 16
... 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 and a strenuous moral idealism .
... 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 and a strenuous moral idealism .
Seite 20
... 1623 is a matter of conjecture only ; but he certainly knew Spenser , whom he afterwards praised as a better moral teacher than Scotus or Aquinas , and Sylvester's translation of Du Bartas ' sacred poem , “ Divine Weeks and Words .
... 1623 is a matter of conjecture only ; but he certainly knew Spenser , whom he afterwards praised as a better moral teacher than Scotus or Aquinas , and Sylvester's translation of Du Bartas ' sacred poem , “ Divine Weeks and Words .
Seite 35
In thinking of his life - work as a whole , we commonly emphasise so strongly the purely religious and moral side of it , and the Hebraic zeal or righteousness which in later life came to govern all his efforts , that we are apt to lose ...
In thinking of his life - work as a whole , we commonly emphasise so strongly the purely religious and moral side of it , and the Hebraic zeal or righteousness which in later life came to govern all his efforts , that we are apt to lose ...
Seite 59
... controversialist delivered his sweeping attack before the great poet gave proof that one of the forms which had been savagely denounced as hopelessly vile could be turned to the service of the highest and purest moral teaching .
... controversialist delivered his sweeping attack before the great poet gave proof that one of the forms which had been savagely denounced as hopelessly vile could be turned to the service of the highest and purest moral teaching .
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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