The Poetical Works of John Milton, 1±ÇWilliam Tegg & Company, 1853 |
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x ÆäÀÌÁö
... rise above the watery main : Who by his all - commanding might Did fill the new - made world with light , And caused the golden - tressed sun All the day long his course to run ; The horned moon to shine by night Amongst her spangled ...
... rise above the watery main : Who by his all - commanding might Did fill the new - made world with light , And caused the golden - tressed sun All the day long his course to run ; The horned moon to shine by night Amongst her spangled ...
xxiii ÆäÀÌÁö
... rise in slow and majestic dignity to the sun ; hovering sometimes on his mighty pinions , and seeming to hang over the earth , as if his eye was penetrating into its depths ; and then , as if with an angel's power , again darting into ...
... rise in slow and majestic dignity to the sun ; hovering sometimes on his mighty pinions , and seeming to hang over the earth , as if his eye was penetrating into its depths ; and then , as if with an angel's power , again darting into ...
lxxxiii ÆäÀÌÁö
... rising one above another , and improving in horror to the end of the Iliad . Milton's fight of angels is wrought up with the same beauty : it is ushered in with such signs of wrath as are suitable to Omnipotence incensed . The first ...
... rising one above another , and improving in horror to the end of the Iliad . Milton's fight of angels is wrought up with the same beauty : it is ushered in with such signs of wrath as are suitable to Omnipotence incensed . The first ...
lxxxiv ÆäÀÌÁö
... rise of themselves , from the subject of which he treats . In a word , though they are natural , they are not obvious ; which is the true character of all fine writing . " * In the tenth book , upon the arrival of Sin and Death into the ...
... rise of themselves , from the subject of which he treats . In a word , though they are natural , they are not obvious ; which is the true character of all fine writing . " * In the tenth book , upon the arrival of Sin and Death into the ...
lxxxvii ÆäÀÌÁö
... rise together in the mind , and cannot be separated ; but there are spiritual ideas sublimer than any illustration from materiality . The embodiment ought to lie , not in the metaphor , but in the abstraction itself . By the junction of ...
... rise together in the mind , and cannot be separated ; but there are spiritual ideas sublimer than any illustration from materiality . The embodiment ought to lie , not in the metaphor , but in the abstraction itself . By the junction of ...
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Adam Adam and Eve admiration ¨¡neid alludes allusion ancient angels appears beautiful behold bright called character cloud Comus dark death delight divine earth Euripides evil expression eyes fable Faery Queen Faithful Shepherdess father fear fire genius give glory gods grace happy hath heart heaven heavenly hell holy Homer honour human imagery images imagination infernal invention John Milton king language learning less light live Lord Lord Brackley Lycidas Milton mind moral Muse nature never Newton night noble observes Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage passions perhaps poem poet poet's poetical poetry praise reader Samson Samson Agonistes Satan Saviour says Scripture seem'd seems sentiments Shakspeare sight song spake speaking speech Spenser spirit stood strength sublime sweet taste thee thence things thought throne Thyer truth verse Virgil virtue WARTON wings words