The Poetical Works of John Milton, 1±ÇWilliam Pickering, 1834 |
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... passages from standard English writers than is to be found in any similar work ; and the reading necessary for the supply of this immense body , must have been the labour of years . A part of this Dictionary appeared , we find , in the ...
... passages from standard English writers than is to be found in any similar work ; and the reading necessary for the supply of this immense body , must have been the labour of years . A part of this Dictionary appeared , we find , in the ...
xi ÆäÀÌÁö
... , p . 172 , App . xxxii . on passages in the Paradise Lost , taken from the Setti giorni of Tasso . See Black's Life of Tasso , vol . ii . p . 469 . Latin poems of Milton , though they have not quite ADVERTISEMENT . XI Book.
... , p . 172 , App . xxxii . on passages in the Paradise Lost , taken from the Setti giorni of Tasso . See Black's Life of Tasso , vol . ii . p . 469 . Latin poems of Milton , though they have not quite ADVERTISEMENT . XI Book.
xii ÆäÀÌÁö
... passages with the living spirit of Milton's poetry , were an act of presumption in the aged critic ; yet , I must confess , there is something less of arrogance in the manner in which they are pro- posed , than might have been expected ...
... passages with the living spirit of Milton's poetry , were an act of presumption in the aged critic ; yet , I must confess , there is something less of arrogance in the manner in which they are pro- posed , than might have been expected ...
xiii ÆäÀÌÁö
... passage . The conjectures which , in his own printed edition , I find waiting in the margin , and eager for admit- tance into the verse ; in his MS . copy are attended with a numerous train , as little plausible or satis- factory as ...
... passage . The conjectures which , in his own printed edition , I find waiting in the margin , and eager for admit- tance into the verse ; in his MS . copy are attended with a numerous train , as little plausible or satis- factory as ...
xiv ÆäÀÌÁö
... , the absurdity of See Note on P. L. i . 197. Knowing by the passages , that our poet blind , and then poor and friendless , had fre- quently foul play . ' Bentley's system , the flatness of his prosaic al- terations xiv ADVERTISEMENT .
... , the absurdity of See Note on P. L. i . 197. Knowing by the passages , that our poet blind , and then poor and friendless , had fre- quently foul play . ' Bentley's system , the flatness of his prosaic al- terations xiv ADVERTISEMENT .
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