The Poetical Works of John Milton, 1±ÇMacmillan, 1874 - 491ÆäÀÌÁö |
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xiv ÆäÀÌÁö
... wonder , wood , word , work , world . Not only some of the verbs but also some of the nouns and adjectives in this list occur so very often ( Earth , Heaven , God , man , high , free , good , fair , glory , happy , large , love , hard ...
... wonder , wood , word , work , world . Not only some of the verbs but also some of the nouns and adjectives in this list occur so very often ( Earth , Heaven , God , man , high , free , good , fair , glory , happy , large , love , hard ...
lvii ÆäÀÌÁö
... wonder whist Smoothly the waters kist . ' The following are some other peculiarities in the conjugation of strong verbs , with references to passages : — Sung for sang ; sprung for sprang ; sunk for sank ; and frore for frozen ( P. L. ...
... wonder whist Smoothly the waters kist . ' The following are some other peculiarities in the conjugation of strong verbs , with references to passages : — Sung for sang ; sprung for sprang ; sunk for sank ; and frore for frozen ( P. L. ...
lxiii ÆäÀÌÁö
... wonder if the form was of northern origin , s being a favourite inflectional factotum in northern parts , and the form it having been adopted there for book- use , though hit was vernacular . The oldest instances of it's quoted by Mr ...
... wonder if the form was of northern origin , s being a favourite inflectional factotum in northern parts , and the form it having been adopted there for book- use , though hit was vernacular . The oldest instances of it's quoted by Mr ...
lxvii ÆäÀÌÁö
... wonder is that a similar stress of meaning and context did not oblige Milton to write or dictate its much more frequently . 66 How does he get on without it ? Marvellously well . In the first place , the very idea or peculiar mental ...
... wonder is that a similar stress of meaning and context did not oblige Milton to write or dictate its much more frequently . 66 How does he get on without it ? Marvellously well . In the first place , the very idea or peculiar mental ...
lxxvii ÆäÀÌÁö
... wonder that , for this among other reasons , the Latinism of his English style there attained its maximum ? Such , at all events , is the fact . An example or two will verify what has been said . Let the scholarly reader observe ...
... wonder that , for this among other reasons , the Latinism of his English style there attained its maximum ? Such , at all events , is the fact . An example or two will verify what has been said . Let the scholarly reader observe ...
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Adam Adam and Eve Aldersgate Street Angels appeared arms behold Blank Verse blind bliss Bunhill Fields C©¡sura called Chaos copies dark daughters death delight divine Earth edition of Paradise Empyrean English eternal evil eyes fair Father fear Fiend fire fruit glory hand happy hast hath Heaven Heavenly Hell highth hill Iambus Jacob Tonson John Milton King Latin less light lines live Milton mind night once pain Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage perhaps Petty France poem poet Poetical poetry possessive printed pronunciation reign rhyme round Samson Agonistes Satan seems Serpent Shakespeare sight Simmons soon Sotheby's sound spake spelling Sphere Spirits Spondee stars stood sweet syllable syntax taste thee thence things thou thought throne Tonson tree Trochee Universe whence wings wonder words World writing