Criticism on Milton's Paradise Lost : from The Spectator, 31 December 1711-3 May 1712Constable, 1868 - 152 |
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Strona 78
... take notice of it . Gabriel's discovering his approach at a distance , is drawn 78 CRITICISM OF BOOK IV .
... take notice of it . Gabriel's discovering his approach at a distance , is drawn 78 CRITICISM OF BOOK IV .
Strona 79
... take notice , that Milton is every where full of Hints , and sometimes literal Translations , taken from the greatest of the Greek and Latin Poets . this I fhall [ may ] reserve for a Difcourfe by it felf , be- cause I would not break ...
... take notice , that Milton is every where full of Hints , and sometimes literal Translations , taken from the greatest of the Greek and Latin Poets . this I fhall [ may ] reserve for a Difcourfe by it felf , be- cause I would not break ...
Strona 80
... take Notice under the Head of the Machines , that Uriel's gliding down to the Earth upon a Sun - beam , with the Poet's Device to make him defcend , as well in his return to the Sun , as in his coming from it , is a Prettiness that ...
... take Notice under the Head of the Machines , that Uriel's gliding down to the Earth upon a Sun - beam , with the Poet's Device to make him defcend , as well in his return to the Sun , as in his coming from it , is a Prettiness that ...
Strona 85
... take notice that Milton , in his Con- ferences between Adam and Eve , had his Eye very frequently upon the Book of Canticles , in which there is a noble Spirit of Eastern Poetry , and very often not unlike what we meet with in Homer ...
... take notice that Milton , in his Con- ferences between Adam and Eve , had his Eye very frequently upon the Book of Canticles , in which there is a noble Spirit of Eastern Poetry , and very often not unlike what we meet with in Homer ...
Strona 111
... take notice of two shining Paffages in the Dialogue between Adam and the Angel . The firft is that wherein our Ancestor gives an Account of the Pleasure he took in conversing with him , which contains a very noble Moral . For while I ...
... take notice of two shining Paffages in the Dialogue between Adam and the Angel . The firft is that wherein our Ancestor gives an Account of the Pleasure he took in conversing with him , which contains a very noble Moral . For while I ...
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
Action Adam Adam and Eve Æneas Æneid Allegory alſo Angels appear Ariftotle aſtoniſhing Author Battel beautiful becauſe Characters Circumſtances Converſation Creation Criticiſm Criticks deſcribed Deſcription Deſign Difcourfe diſcover Divine Earth Eneid Epic Poem Epic Poetry Epiſode Expreffion Fable fame fecond feems felf feveral fhall fhew fhort firft Firſt Book firſt Parents fome fuch fufficient fuitable give greateſt Greatneſs Heaven Hell Heroic Poem himſelf Hiſtory Homer Iliad Imagination Infernal Inftances juſt laſt likewiſe Majefty Mankind Maſter meaſure Meffiah Milton Mind moſt muſt Nature noble obferved occafion Ovid Paffage paffed Paffion Paper Paradife Loft particular Paſſage Perfons pleaſed Pleaſure Poet Poetical Poetry preſent racters raiſed Reader Reaſon repreſented rifes riſes ſame Satan ſee ſelf Sentiments ſeveral ſhall ſhort ſhould ſome ſpeak SPECTATOR Speech Spirit ſtill Sublime ſuch take notice thee thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe Thoughts tion uſe Verſe Virgil Viſion wherein whole Poem