Milton and His PoetryHarrap, 1914 - 184 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 10
Seite 5
... regarded simply as a self - contained and detached piece of art , having no personal affiliations or bearings . Of the validity of this as an abstract principle nothing need now be said . The fact remains that , in the earlier stages of ...
... regarded simply as a self - contained and detached piece of art , having no personal affiliations or bearings . Of the validity of this as an abstract principle nothing need now be said . The fact remains that , in the earlier stages of ...
Seite 38
... regarded , from childhood up , as his settled vocation . But before his Cambridge course had closed he had come to realise that for him Holy Orders were impossible . " To the service of the Church , " he afterwards wrote , " by the ...
... regarded , from childhood up , as his settled vocation . But before his Cambridge course had closed he had come to realise that for him Holy Orders were impossible . " To the service of the Church , " he afterwards wrote , " by the ...
Seite 98
... regarded as a typical example of the courtly - classic taste which prevailed in English non - dramatic litera- ture during the Elizabethan age . These lines Milton again follows in " Lycidas , " in which , instead of expressing directly ...
... regarded as a typical example of the courtly - classic taste which prevailed in English non - dramatic litera- ture during the Elizabethan age . These lines Milton again follows in " Lycidas , " in which , instead of expressing directly ...
Seite 102
... regarded by the Puritans , to whom all ceremonial formalism was hateful , as a sure sign of his sympathy with the anti - Protestant tendencies which were at work in the land ; even moderate men began to suspect that it was his ultimate ...
... regarded by the Puritans , to whom all ceremonial formalism was hateful , as a sure sign of his sympathy with the anti - Protestant tendencies which were at work in the land ; even moderate men began to suspect that it was his ultimate ...
Seite 125
... regarded him- self , rightly or wrongly , as the apostle of a wise and beneficial liberty . On the question of the relations of the sexes , Milton , as every reader of “ Paradise Lost " will soon discover for him- self , held very ...
... regarded him- self , rightly or wrongly , as the apostle of a wise and beneficial liberty . On the question of the relations of the sexes , Milton , as every reader of “ Paradise Lost " will soon discover for him- self , held very ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Andrew Marvell Angel appear Areopagitica beauty blind Bunhill Fields 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 political 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 young youth