¡°The¡± Poetical Works of John Milton, 3±ÇMacmillan, 1890 |
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58 ÆäÀÌÁö
... phrases as " I did say it to ' im , but ' e drove me to it by ' is conduct to ' er " ; and that the same habit was common long ago , not among uneducated persons merely , is proved by the fact that in Early English writings we find ' a ...
... phrases as " I did say it to ' im , but ' e drove me to it by ' is conduct to ' er " ; and that the same habit was common long ago , not among uneducated persons merely , is proved by the fact that in Early English writings we find ' a ...
62 ÆäÀÌÁö
... phrase , Luke xiv . 34 , " If the salt have lost his savour , wherewith shall it be seasoned ? " In any case , the utter omission of the word its from the authorised version , though that word was already in existence in London , seems ...
... phrase , Luke xiv . 34 , " If the salt have lost his savour , wherewith shall it be seasoned ? " In any case , the utter omission of the word its from the authorised version , though that word was already in existence in London , seems ...
80 ÆäÀÌÁö
... phrase compounded of an adjective and a substantive is made to do duty as an adjective . The Miltonic examples of it , though memorable , are few . I have noted the following : - " He scarce had ceased when the superior Fiend Was 80 ...
... phrase compounded of an adjective and a substantive is made to do duty as an adjective . The Miltonic examples of it , though memorable , are few . I have noted the following : - " He scarce had ceased when the superior Fiend Was 80 ...
83 ÆäÀÌÁö
... phrase " The other sort , " in the one , and the noun " Thoughts " in the other , may be taken as in- stances of an ... phrases as " He denied you had in him no right , " " " Forbade the boy he should not pass these bounds , " where the ...
... phrase " The other sort , " in the one , and the noun " Thoughts " in the other , may be taken as in- stances of an ... phrases as " He denied you had in him no right , " " " Forbade the boy he should not pass these bounds , " where the ...
89 ÆäÀÌÁö
... phrase . Probably Milton's habit of referring to Latin con- structions made it natural for him to perpetuate this ... phrases as mei qui , mei cujus , ejus qui , ejus quem , eorum qui , eorum quos , etc. We see this recollectiveness of ...
... phrase . Probably Milton's habit of referring to Latin con- structions made it natural for him to perpetuate this ... phrases as mei qui , mei cujus , ejus qui , ejus quem , eorum qui , eorum quos , etc. We see this recollectiveness of ...
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adjective ¨¡neid allusion Angels Blank Verse Book C©¡sura called Cambridge draft Chaos Chaucer Compare Comus death Dunster Earth Elegy Essay on Milton's Faery Queene father goddess Greek hath Heaven Hell hence Hume idiom Iliad instances Introd Italian Keightley King L'Allegro Latin Lycidas meaning meant metre Milton Milton's English Milton's poetry Muse natural noun occurs once original editions original text Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parthian passage peculiar perhaps phrase poem poetical poets present printed pronunciation prose Psalm Ptolemaic system reading recollection reference rhyme Roman round Samson Samson Agonistes Satan says Second Edition seems sense Shakespeare sing song Sonnet sound speech spelling spelt Spenser sphere spirit Spondee stanza star suggested supposed syllable syntax thee Theocritus thou tion Todd quotes Trochee verb VIII Virgil Warton whole word writing ¬ç¬Ñ