The Poetical Works of John Milton: With Notes of Various Authors. To which are Added Illustrations, and Some Account of the Life and Writings of Milton, 2±ÇJ. Johnson, 1809 |
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... notice of , mifreprefented Virgil's way of thinking as to this particular , in the trans- lation he has given us of the Eneid . I do not re- member that Homer any where falls into the faults abovementioned , which were indeed the falfe ...
... notice of , mifreprefented Virgil's way of thinking as to this particular , in the trans- lation he has given us of the Eneid . I do not re- member that Homer any where falls into the faults abovementioned , which were indeed the falfe ...
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... notice , that there are in Milton feveral words of his own coining , as Cer- f of his own coining , & c . ] This is not exactly the cafe , in the words here cited . See the Notes on B. ii . 683 , 900. Eremite berean , mifcreated , hell ...
... notice , that there are in Milton feveral words of his own coining , as Cer- f of his own coining , & c . ] This is not exactly the cafe , in the words here cited . See the Notes on B. ii . 683 , 900. Eremite berean , mifcreated , hell ...
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... notice of in Milton's ftyle , is the frequent ufe of what the learned call technical words , or terms of art . It is one of the greatest beauties of poetry , to make hard things intelligible , and to deliver what is ab- ftrufe of itself ...
... notice of in Milton's ftyle , is the frequent ufe of what the learned call technical words , or terms of art . It is one of the greatest beauties of poetry , to make hard things intelligible , and to deliver what is ab- ftrufe of itself ...
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... notice of fuch beauties as appear to me more exquifite than the reft . Milton has proposed the subject of his Poem in the following verfes : " Of Man's firft difobedience , and the fruit " Of that forbidden tree , whofe mortal tafte " 6 ...
... notice of fuch beauties as appear to me more exquifite than the reft . Milton has proposed the subject of his Poem in the following verfes : " Of Man's firft difobedience , and the fruit " Of that forbidden tree , whofe mortal tafte " 6 ...
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... notices also the change and confufion of the fallen Angels , moft artfully expreffed in the abruptnefs of the beginning of Satan's speech : " If thou beeft he ; that Beëlzebub ! —He stops ; and falls into a bitter reflection on their ...
... notices also the change and confufion of the fallen Angels , moft artfully expreffed in the abruptnefs of the beginning of Satan's speech : " If thou beeft he ; that Beëlzebub ! —He stops ; and falls into a bitter reflection on their ...
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