The Poetical Works of John MiltonJ. R. Osgood, 1874 |
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112 ÆäÀÌÁö
... Cambridge , and the pleasant talk which I had " oft with M. Cheke and M. Watson of this fault not only in the old " Latin poets , but also in our new English rhymers at this day . They wished , as Virgil and Horace were not wedded to ...
... Cambridge , and the pleasant talk which I had " oft with M. Cheke and M. Watson of this fault not only in the old " Latin poets , but also in our new English rhymers at this day . They wished , as Virgil and Horace were not wedded to ...
311 ÆäÀÌÁö
... Cambridge have been called the two eyes of England ; while Ben Jonson cailed Edinburgh " The heart of Scotland , Britain's other eye , " London , of course , being the first . • 241 , 242. " native or hospitable , " i.e. either ...
... Cambridge have been called the two eyes of England ; while Ben Jonson cailed Edinburgh " The heart of Scotland , Britain's other eye , " London , of course , being the first . • 241 , 242. " native or hospitable , " i.e. either ...
316 ÆäÀÌÁö
... Cambridge stu- dentship , on the odd subject of the respective merits of Day and Night ( " Utrum Dies an Nox pr©¡stantior sit ? " ) , there are passages of descrip- tion similar to some in this place . Thus , " How pleasant and desirable ...
... Cambridge stu- dentship , on the odd subject of the respective merits of Day and Night ( " Utrum Dies an Nox pr©¡stantior sit ? " ) , there are passages of descrip- tion similar to some in this place . Thus , " How pleasant and desirable ...
350 ÆäÀÌÁö
... Cambridge , and one of the editors of the Cambridge Shakespeare . Chancing , early in 1859 , to read this piece of Milton's with some care , and fastening on the little bit of prose with which this concluding speech in it is introduced ...
... Cambridge , and one of the editors of the Cambridge Shakespeare . Chancing , early in 1859 , to read this piece of Milton's with some care , and fastening on the little bit of prose with which this concluding speech in it is introduced ...
359 ÆäÀÌÁö
... The lines , as the draft of them among the Cambridge MSS . shows , were written " to be set on a clock - case . " Compare Shakespeare's Sonnet lxxvii . 12. ¡° individual ¡± : meaning here " indivisible , The Passion . 359.
... The lines , as the draft of them among the Cambridge MSS . shows , were written " to be set on a clock - case . " Compare Shakespeare's Sonnet lxxvii . 12. ¡° individual ¡± : meaning here " indivisible , The Passion . 359.
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