The Poetical Works of John MiltonW. Tegg, 1862 - 767ÆäÀÌÁö |
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xii ÆäÀÌÁö
... seems to have meditated an Epic poem on King Arthur , or some other part of the old British story . See " Epitaphium Damonis " ( Deodatus ) , and " Epistola ad Mansum . " In his " Elegia in adventum Veris , " written in his twentieth ...
... seems to have meditated an Epic poem on King Arthur , or some other part of the old British story . See " Epitaphium Damonis " ( Deodatus ) , and " Epistola ad Mansum . " In his " Elegia in adventum Veris , " written in his twentieth ...
xiv ÆäÀÌÁö
... seems himself in the state of wonder and awe of the shepherds , and of all those whom he describes as affected by this miracle . The trembling , the fervour , the blaze is true inspiration . In this state , the poet , visited by ...
... seems himself in the state of wonder and awe of the shepherds , and of all those whom he describes as affected by this miracle . The trembling , the fervour , the blaze is true inspiration . In this state , the poet , visited by ...
xv ÆäÀÌÁö
... seems yet to have produced no fame to him . When he retired to his father's house at Horton next year , he retired as one who had yet done nothing . His Latin poems want the solemnity , the sublimity , the enthusiasm , the wildness ...
... seems yet to have produced no fame to him . When he retired to his father's house at Horton next year , he retired as one who had yet done nothing . His Latin poems want the solemnity , the sublimity , the enthusiasm , the wildness ...
xxviii ÆäÀÌÁö
... seems to have overleaped the Platonic pale , and to have lost his way among the solemn conceits of Peter Lombard and Thomas Aquinas . It is no wonder that the angel blushed , as well as smiled , at some of these questions . " " The ...
... seems to have overleaped the Platonic pale , and to have lost his way among the solemn conceits of Peter Lombard and Thomas Aquinas . It is no wonder that the angel blushed , as well as smiled , at some of these questions . " " The ...
xxxv ÆäÀÌÁö
... seems that Milton endeavoured to teach his scholars a wider range of know- ledge than the Doctor thought practicable ; whereupon follows that famous passage of Johnson , which has been so often cited , and which is so excellent , that I ...
... seems that Milton endeavoured to teach his scholars a wider range of know- ledge than the Doctor thought practicable ; whereupon follows that famous passage of Johnson , which has been so often cited , and which is so excellent , that I ...
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