The Poetical Works of John Milton, 3±ÇJohn Macrone, 1835 |
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3 ÆäÀÌÁö
... never been equalled . The globe , with all its rich contents , thus lies displayed before us , like a landscape under the freshness of the dewy light of the opening morning , when the shadows of night first fly away . Here is to be ...
... never been equalled . The globe , with all its rich contents , thus lies displayed before us , like a landscape under the freshness of the dewy light of the opening morning , when the shadows of night first fly away . Here is to be ...
45 ÆäÀÌÁö
... never as a rhetorician : he has never any factitious warmth ; what he relates he first sees : the richness of his imagination is united with extreme and surprising sim- plicity he rejects all adornment . The imagination , which creates ...
... never as a rhetorician : he has never any factitious warmth ; what he relates he first sees : the richness of his imagination is united with extreme and surprising sim- plicity he rejects all adornment . The imagination , which creates ...
46 ÆäÀÌÁö
... never have reached those thoughts , though natural and human , yet mixed with intellectual sublimity and exalted passion , which the poet ascribes to Adam and Eve ; and in which his beautiful language could only be attained by following ...
... never have reached those thoughts , though natural and human , yet mixed with intellectual sublimity and exalted passion , which the poet ascribes to Adam and Eve ; and in which his beautiful language could only be attained by following ...
47 ÆäÀÌÁö
... never out of place , but result from the leading characters of the poem ; and are quite as essential to it , even as its grand , or beauti- , ful , and breathing imagery . ARGUMENT OF BOOK VIII . ADAM inquires concerning celestial ...
... never out of place , but result from the leading characters of the poem ; and are quite as essential to it , even as its grand , or beauti- , ful , and breathing imagery . ARGUMENT OF BOOK VIII . ADAM inquires concerning celestial ...
78 ÆäÀÌÁö
... never suit together . A musical metaphor , from strings , of which the stretched and highest give a smart and sharp sound , the slack a flat and heavy one . - HUMe . 66 20 Ver . 413. Thy eternal ways . See Rom . xi . 33 : — ' O , the ...
... never suit together . A musical metaphor , from strings , of which the stretched and highest give a smart and sharp sound , the slack a flat and heavy one . - HUMe . 66 20 Ver . 413. Thy eternal ways . See Rom . xi . 33 : — ' O , the ...
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Adam and Eve Adam's ¨¡neid angel answer'd appear'd archangel beast beautiful behold bliss call'd Canaan cherubim cloud created creation creatures Cronian darkness death delight descend didst divine dwell earth Eve's evil eyes fair faith Father fear fruit gates glory grace ground hand happy hath heard heart heaven heavenly hell hill human imagination J. M. W. TURNER lest Leucothea light live Lord mankind Milton mind moral morning nature NEWTON night Ovid Paradise Lost passage passion peace Persia plagues of Egypt pleasure Pleiades poem poet poetical poetry reason replied return'd sapience Satan Scripture seed seem'd serpent shalt sight sleep Smectymnuus soon spake speak spirit stars stood sublime sweet taste Terah thee thence thine things thou hast thought throne tree turn'd Virgil virtue voice wonder words