Milton & His PoetryGeorge G. Harrap & Company, 1914 - 184 Seiten |
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Seite 11
... temper , who desired to move cautiously , and who , while recognising the urgent need of change , were averse from any violent rupture with the past . While rejecting the Papacy and correcting various abuses in the organisation and ...
... temper , who desired to move cautiously , and who , while recognising the urgent need of change , were averse from any violent rupture with the past . While rejecting the Papacy and correcting various abuses in the organisation and ...
Seite 14
... temper of English society is on the face of it evident . It is by reference to it , indeed , that we can largely explain the enormous difference which separates the England of the middle of the reign of Elizabeth from the England which ...
... temper of English society is on the face of it evident . It is by reference to it , indeed , that we can largely explain the enormous difference which separates the England of the middle of the reign of Elizabeth from the England which ...
Seite 21
... temper of the Hebrew mind . We have here a first slight indication of that union of the Hebraic and the classical which , as we shall see , was afterwards so marked a feature of his work . For the time being , however , his powers were ...
... temper of the Hebrew mind . We have here a first slight indication of that union of the Hebraic and the classical which , as we shall see , was afterwards so marked a feature of his work . For the time being , however , his powers were ...
Seite 35
... temper and to his interest in religious things . Yet there is nothing in it to foreshadow his later Puritanism , nothing to distinguish it as the work of one who was pre- sently to use the forms of the ancient epic as the vehicle of a ...
... temper and to his interest in religious things . Yet there is nothing in it to foreshadow his later Puritanism , nothing to distinguish it as the work of one who was pre- sently to use the forms of the ancient epic as the vehicle of a ...
Seite 45
... these things were anathema . For the time being , there is still far more of the Hellenic than of the Puritan in Milton , and the influence of the Renaissance , however much tempered by the poet's profoundly religious 45 MILTON & HIS ...
... these things were anathema . For the time being , there is still far more of the Hellenic than of the Puritan in Milton , and the influence of the Renaissance , however much tempered by the poet's profoundly religious 45 MILTON & HIS ...
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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