The Poetical Works of John Milton, 1±ÇWilliam Pickering, 1834 |
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xx ÆäÀÌÁö
... bright vein of its poetry , intermixed with a softness of description.20 T. Warton observes that Comus is a suite of speeches not interesting by discrimination of character , not conveying variety of incidents , nor gradually ex- citing ...
... bright vein of its poetry , intermixed with a softness of description.20 T. Warton observes that Comus is a suite of speeches not interesting by discrimination of character , not conveying variety of incidents , nor gradually ex- citing ...
xx ÆäÀÌÁö
... bright and free ! And breathe , ye orange groves , along her plains ; Ye fountains , sparkle through her marble fanes : And hang aloft , thou rich and purple sky , Hang up thy gorgeous canopy thou Sun ! Shine on her marble palaces that ...
... bright and free ! And breathe , ye orange groves , along her plains ; Ye fountains , sparkle through her marble fanes : And hang aloft , thou rich and purple sky , Hang up thy gorgeous canopy thou Sun ! Shine on her marble palaces that ...
xcvi ÆäÀÌÁö
... bright dawning of a more glorious day , came lowering with such clouds and darkness , as to sink the virtuous heart of Falkland even to despair . 6 Harrington 50 had observed , that the troubles of the times were not to be attributed ...
... bright dawning of a more glorious day , came lowering with such clouds and darkness , as to sink the virtuous heart of Falkland even to despair . 6 Harrington 50 had observed , that the troubles of the times were not to be attributed ...
cix ÆäÀÌÁö
... bright form ' of Truth appear from out the cloud ; but wherever we look , the pride of man's heart is lowered , and the weakness of humanity displayed . With all his great qualifications for the removal of error , and the discovery of ...
... bright form ' of Truth appear from out the cloud ; but wherever we look , the pride of man's heart is lowered , and the weakness of humanity displayed . With all his great qualifications for the removal of error , and the discovery of ...
5 ÆäÀÌÁö
... bright ! If he , whom mutual league , United thoughts and counsels , equal hope And hazard in the glorious enterprize , Join'd with me once , now misery hath join'd In equal ruin into what pit thou seest From what height fall'n , so ...
... bright ! If he , whom mutual league , United thoughts and counsels , equal hope And hazard in the glorious enterprize , Join'd with me once , now misery hath join'd In equal ruin into what pit thou seest From what height fall'n , so ...
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