Milton & 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 16
... made to trace the history of Puritanism in detail , or to give a full account of the consequences resulting from its development as the chief force in English life and thought during the second quarter of the seventeenth century .
... made to trace the history of Puritanism in detail , or to give a full account of the consequences resulting from its development as the chief force in English life and thought during the second quarter of the seventeenth century .
Seite 19
... What might be public Good ; Myself I thought Born to that end , born to promote all truth , All righteous things : therefore , above My years The Law of God I read and found it sweet.1 That the scrivener very early recognised his ...
... What might be public Good ; Myself I thought Born to that end , born to promote all truth , All righteous things : therefore , above My years The Law of God I read and found it sweet.1 That the scrivener very early recognised his ...
Seite 24
But , all deductions made , it is still a great poem , vigorous in thought and language , often indeed splendid in diction , and occasionally even rising into that grand manner which was to be one of the outstanding qualities of ...
But , all deductions made , it is still a great poem , vigorous in thought and language , often indeed splendid in diction , and occasionally even rising into that grand manner which was to be one of the outstanding qualities of ...
Seite 25
Milton evidently thought out his poem as an organic whole ; the different parts of it arise out of and support one another ; and the contrast provided by variety in details and tones is attained without sacrifice of essential unity .
Milton evidently thought out his poem as an organic whole ; the different parts of it arise out of and support one another ; and the contrast provided by variety in details and tones is attained without sacrifice of essential unity .
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