The Poetical Works of John Milton, 1±ÇLittle, Brown, 1854 |
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x ÆäÀÌÁö
... darker at his frown , as he directed the thunder of his wrath against an impracticable philosophy he would have despised , and an erratic theology he would have detested . To disarm the severity of this criticism , and to represent in ...
... darker at his frown , as he directed the thunder of his wrath against an impracticable philosophy he would have despised , and an erratic theology he would have detested . To disarm the severity of this criticism , and to represent in ...
xv ÆäÀÌÁö
... darkness till it smiled : ' and the entire silence of the commentators has been remarked . I shall , therefore , observe that there can be no doubt , but that Milton had the following passage in Heywood's Love's Mis- tresse before him ...
... darkness till it smiled : ' and the entire silence of the commentators has been remarked . I shall , therefore , observe that there can be no doubt , but that Milton had the following passage in Heywood's Love's Mis- tresse before him ...
lxii ÆäÀÌÁö
... darkness the light of the divine coun- tenance does but more brightly shine ; for then I shall at once be the weakest ... dark- ness should I be enrobed with light . And , in truth , we who are blind , are not the last regarded by the ...
... darkness the light of the divine coun- tenance does but more brightly shine ; for then I shall at once be the weakest ... dark- ness should I be enrobed with light . And , in truth , we who are blind , are not the last regarded by the ...
lxiii ÆäÀÌÁö
John Milton. have seemed to have brought the darkness upon us , so much by inducing a dimness of the eyes , as by the overshadowing of heavenly wings . Besides , as I am not grown torpid by indolence , since my eyes have deserted me ...
John Milton. have seemed to have brought the darkness upon us , so much by inducing a dimness of the eyes , as by the overshadowing of heavenly wings . Besides , as I am not grown torpid by indolence , since my eyes have deserted me ...
lxxx ÆäÀÌÁö
... dark and perplexed a subject . He plainly copies Spenser's order and disposition , whom he quotes ; and almost transcribes from him the story of Lear , of much however as the difference between prose and verse will admit . Milton's ...
... dark and perplexed a subject . He plainly copies Spenser's order and disposition , whom he quotes ; and almost transcribes from him the story of Lear , of much however as the difference between prose and verse will admit . Milton's ...
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