Milton & His PoetryGeorge G. Harrap & Company, 1914 - 184 Seiten |
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Seite 5
... human and vital ; and the human and vital interest of poetry can be most surely brought home to the reader by the biographical method of This is to some extent recognised by writers of histories 5 GENERAL PREFACE ...
... human and vital ; and the human and vital interest of poetry can be most surely brought home to the reader by the biographical method of This is to some extent recognised by writers of histories 5 GENERAL PREFACE ...
Seite 6
... reader in the lives and personalities of the poets dealt with , and at the same time to use biography as an introduction and key to their writings . Each volume will therefore contain the life- story of the poet who forms its subject ...
... reader in the lives and personalities of the poets dealt with , and at the same time to use biography as an introduction and key to their writings . Each volume will therefore contain the life- story of the poet who forms its subject ...
Seite 24
... reader fail to appreciate the skill with which the materials are arranged , and much that lies outside the immediate topic is brought into the framework . We have first the simple details of the Saviour's birth , the setting of the ...
... reader fail to appreciate the skill with which the materials are arranged , and much that lies outside the immediate topic is brought into the framework . We have first the simple details of the Saviour's birth , the setting of the ...
Seite 41
... reader , still he employed it in no pedantic spirit , and simply because it was for him a natural instrument of expression . It is quite true that he often abused his scholarship . But let us understand how it came to be so distinctive ...
... reader , still he employed it in no pedantic spirit , and simply because it was for him a natural instrument of expression . It is quite true that he often abused his scholarship . But let us understand how it came to be so distinctive ...
Seite 42
... reader will cherish it simply for its intrinsic grace and charm . As a matter of detail we should remember that , as Masson points out , there is in it " a recollection of the superstition that he who hears the nightingale before he ...
... reader will cherish it simply for its intrinsic grace and charm . As a matter of detail we should remember that , as Masson points out , there is in it " a recollection of the superstition that he who hears the nightingale before he ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Areopagitica beauty blind bow'r Brother called character charm Church classical Comus Cromwell dark daughter Defensio delight Diodati divine doth earth Elder elegy enchanting England English epic eternal ev'n ev'ry evil eyes fair faith flocks genius Goddess Greek hast hath Heav'n ideal Il Penseroso influence inspired ISAAC FOOT John Milton king L'Allegro Lady learning liberty light literature live Lycidas Mark Pattison Masson Milton mind moral Muse never night Nymph o'er Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage passion pastoral peace Penseroso poem poet poet's poetic POETRY pow'r praise prose Puritan reader religious remaining Renaissance Samson Agonistes shades Shepherd sing song sonnet soul spirit Stopford Brooke sweet temper thee thence things Thomas Ellwood thou thought tion tragedy verse virgin virtue W. H. Hudson WILLIAM HENRY HUDSON wings writings young youth