The Poetical Works of John Milton, 1±ÇMacmillan, 1874 - 491ÆäÀÌÁö |
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ix ÆäÀÌÁö
... London in 1867 : being an improvement on a Verbal Index , based on Todd's , which Mr. Cleveland had prepared for an American edition of the Poetical Works in 1853 . VOL . I. b plan , it is found that Shakespeare's vocabulary in his.
... London in 1867 : being an improvement on a Verbal Index , based on Todd's , which Mr. Cleveland had prepared for an American edition of the Poetical Works in 1853 . VOL . I. b plan , it is found that Shakespeare's vocabulary in his.
x ÆäÀÌÁö
John Milton David Masson. plan , it is found that Shakespeare's vocabulary in his Plays and Poems consists of about 15,000 words . The greater extent of Shakespeare's poetical vocabulary , as compared with Milton's , may be accounted for ...
John Milton David Masson. plan , it is found that Shakespeare's vocabulary in his Plays and Poems consists of about 15,000 words . The greater extent of Shakespeare's poetical vocabulary , as compared with Milton's , may be accounted for ...
xi ÆäÀÌÁö
... Shakespeare at from 88 to 91 per cent . , and even Chaucer only once reaches 93 per cent . and is usually nearer 89 or 90. Milton's place in the list is assigned from these computations as follows : - L'Allegro Il Penseroso . Paradise ...
... Shakespeare at from 88 to 91 per cent . , and even Chaucer only once reaches 93 per cent . and is usually nearer 89 or 90. Milton's place in the list is assigned from these computations as follows : - L'Allegro Il Penseroso . Paradise ...
xii ÆäÀÌÁö
... Shakespeare - abrupt , ambiguous , artless , congratulate , improbable , improper , improve , impure , inconvenient , in- credible . But it would only be necessary to run the finger down the columns of the Concordance to Shakespeare to ...
... Shakespeare - abrupt , ambiguous , artless , congratulate , improbable , improper , improve , impure , inconvenient , in- credible . But it would only be necessary to run the finger down the columns of the Concordance to Shakespeare to ...
xiv ÆäÀÌÁö
... Shakespeare's words have gone out of currency or changed their meaning , there are not more than a hundred of Milton's words in his poetry which are not as familiar at this day as in that of the poet himself . How far Mr. Marsh is right ...
... Shakespeare's words have gone out of currency or changed their meaning , there are not more than a hundred of Milton's words in his poetry which are not as familiar at this day as in that of the poet himself . How far Mr. Marsh is right ...
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