The Poetical Works of John Milton, 1±ÇJohn Macrone, 1835 |
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... writer - Southey - Scott - Byron - The epic quality of their poems - Remarks- Paradise Regained ' much less encum- bered with abstruse learning than Paradise Lost ' page 248 CHAPTER XXIV . Milton's juvenile poems- L'Allegro ' and ' Il ...
... writer - Southey - Scott - Byron - The epic quality of their poems - Remarks- Paradise Regained ' much less encum- bered with abstruse learning than Paradise Lost ' page 248 CHAPTER XXIV . Milton's juvenile poems- L'Allegro ' and ' Il ...
xix ÆäÀÌÁö
... - gossiping style of old Isaac Walton ! Toland took up the subject , and collected much useful matter ; but he was a heavy writer , who never enjoyed much favour with the public . The Life by Fenton the poet is too meagre to satisfy.
... - gossiping style of old Isaac Walton ! Toland took up the subject , and collected much useful matter ; but he was a heavy writer , who never enjoyed much favour with the public . The Life by Fenton the poet is too meagre to satisfy.
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... writer : in a word , he had more taste , and more poetry , and consequently more propriety . If a fondness for the Italian writers has sometimes infected his English poetry with false ornaments , his Latin verses , both in diction and ...
... writer : in a word , he had more taste , and more poetry , and consequently more propriety . If a fondness for the Italian writers has sometimes infected his English poetry with false ornaments , his Latin verses , both in diction and ...
39 ÆäÀÌÁö
... write a Bacchanalian song ? It seems to me that these two poems are much more valuable for their development of Milton's studies and amusements , than for their poetry , by proving his love of nature , of books , of soli- tude , of ...
... write a Bacchanalian song ? It seems to me that these two poems are much more valuable for their development of Milton's studies and amusements , than for their poetry , by proving his love of nature , of books , of soli- tude , of ...
41 ÆäÀÌÁö
... writer who has not a visionary presence of the objects which produce it : but it were better to give more of the pathos , and less of the objects . This faculty , indeed , was not Milton's chief ex- cellence : now and then he is ...
... writer who has not a visionary presence of the objects which produce it : but it were better to give more of the pathos , and less of the objects . This faculty , indeed , was not Milton's chief ex- cellence : now and then he is ...
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Addison admiration ancient Andrew Marvell angels appear bard beautiful blind character Charles Deodate church Comus Countess of Derby critic daughter delight divine Dryden edition Egerton elegy England English epic exalted fable father favour fiction genius glorious glory Harefield hath heart Heaven honour human Il Penseroso imagery images imagination invention Italy J. M. W. TURNER John Milton Johnson Joseph Warton King L'Allegro labour language Latin learning less liberty lived lofty Lycidas Manso ment mind moral Muse nation native nature never noble observation opinion Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passages passions perhaps persons Petrarch Ph©«bus picturesque poem poet poet's poetical poetry political Pope Powell praise published puritanism racter reader rich Samson Agonistes says seems sentiment Shakspeare Smectymnuus solemn Spenser spirit style sublime Tasso taste thee things thou thought tion true truth verse virtue Warton write written