The Poetical Works of John MiltonJ. R. Osgood, 1874 |
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103 ÆäÀÌÁö
... the present editor , the following remarks may be necessary :-( 1 . ) A very large proportion of the notes , repeated , with or without variation of expression , by editor after editor , are such as Preface to the Notes . 103.
... the present editor , the following remarks may be necessary :-( 1 . ) A very large proportion of the notes , repeated , with or without variation of expression , by editor after editor , are such as Preface to the Notes . 103.
104 ÆäÀÌÁö
... expression adapting old information to modern needs and tastes . This last has been , on the whole , the plan adopted in the notes for the present edition . Seldom , by merely quoting the notes of a previous commentator , or even ...
... expression adapting old information to modern needs and tastes . This last has been , on the whole , the plan adopted in the notes for the present edition . Seldom , by merely quoting the notes of a previous commentator , or even ...
112 ÆäÀÌÁö
... expressing his opinion that the verse of Plautus and Terence and of the oldest Latin poets generally is very poor and crude , " maketh me gladly remember my sweet time spent at Cambridge , and the pleasant talk which I had " oft with M ...
... expressing his opinion that the verse of Plautus and Terence and of the oldest Latin poets generally is very poor and crude , " maketh me gladly remember my sweet time spent at Cambridge , and the pleasant talk which I had " oft with M ...
113 ÆäÀÌÁö
... expression sweep beyond the exact bounds of his intention . For , though he had used Blank Verse in his own earlier poetry , as in Comus , had not the bulk of that poetry been in rhyme ? Nay , though he was to persist in Blank Verse ...
... expression sweep beyond the exact bounds of his intention . For , though he had used Blank Verse in his own earlier poetry , as in Comus , had not the bulk of that poetry been in rhyme ? Nay , though he was to persist in Blank Verse ...
118 ÆäÀÌÁö
... Expression and syntax modelled , as Bentley pointed out , on Ovid , Met . i . 351-3 : " O soror , O conjux , O f©«mina sola superstes , Quam commune mihi genus et patruelis origo , Deinde torus junxit , nunc ipsa pericula jungunt . " 94 ...
... Expression and syntax modelled , as Bentley pointed out , on Ovid , Met . i . 351-3 : " O soror , O conjux , O f©«mina sola superstes , Quam commune mihi genus et patruelis origo , Deinde torus junxit , nunc ipsa pericula jungunt . " 94 ...
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