The Poetical Works of John Milton: With Notes of Various Authors, Tom 2C. and J. Rivington; J. Cuthell; J. Nunn; J. and W.T. Clarke; Longman and Company; ... [and 17 others], 1826 |
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Strona vi
... give him leave to tagge his verses . " TODD . Ver . 51. I too , transported by the mode , offend , And , while I meant to praise thee , must commend . ] This is the true reading . Fenton , in his edition of Paradise Lost in 1725 ...
... give him leave to tagge his verses . " TODD . Ver . 51. I too , transported by the mode , offend , And , while I meant to praise thee , must commend . ] This is the true reading . Fenton , in his edition of Paradise Lost in 1725 ...
Strona vii
... give it that title , may call it ( if they please ) a divine poem . It will be sufficient to its per- fection , if it has in it all the beauties of the highest kind of poetry ; and as for those who allege it is not an heroick poem ...
... give it that title , may call it ( if they please ) a divine poem . It will be sufficient to its per- fection , if it has in it all the beauties of the highest kind of poetry ; and as for those who allege it is not an heroick poem ...
Strona viii
... gives us at the same time a pleasure of the greatest variety , and of the greatest simplicity ; uniform in its nature , though diversified in the execution . I must observe also , that , as Virgil , viii PARADISE LOST .
... gives us at the same time a pleasure of the greatest variety , and of the greatest simplicity ; uniform in its nature , though diversified in the execution . I must observe also , that , as Virgil , viii PARADISE LOST .
Strona x
... give the mind an idea of the whole . What these animals are to the eye , a very short or a very long action would be to the memory . The first would be , as it were , lost and swallowed up by it , and the other difficult to be contained ...
... give the mind an idea of the whole . What these animals are to the eye , a very short or a very long action would be to the memory . The first would be , as it were , lost and swallowed up by it , and the other difficult to be contained ...
Strona xiii
... give B. xi . 135 , commences the eleventh day of the action . " Addison , " says Dr. Newton , " reckons only ten days to the action of the Poem ; that is , he supposes that our first Parents were expelled out of Paradise the very next ...
... give B. xi . 135 , commences the eleventh day of the action . " Addison , " says Dr. Newton , " reckons only ten days to the action of the Poem ; that is , he supposes that our first Parents were expelled out of Paradise the very next ...
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
Adam Adam and Eve Æneas Æneid Almighty ancient Angels appear arms beauty Belial Bentley blank verse bright CALLANDER called Chaos Compare criticks darkness Death delight described divine DUNSTER earth edit epick Euripides evil expression fable Faer Faerie Queene fall fire flowers Gier give glory gods happy hast hath Heaven heavenly Hell heroick Hesiod Homer horrour HUME Ibid Iliad imitation infernal Italian King Latin light Lord manner Milton mind Moloch nature NEWTON night numbers o'er observed Ovid pain Paradise Lost passage PEARCE perhaps poem poet poetical poetry reader remarks RICHARDSON Satan says Scripture seem'd seems sense sentiments Shakspeare simile song spake speaking speech Spenser Spirits STILLINGFLEET stood sublime superiour sweet syllable Tasso terrour thee things thou thought throne THYER TODD verse Virgil wings word δὲ καὶ