Milton's Paradise Lost: With Copious Notes, Explanatory and Critical, Partly Selected from the Various Commentators, and Partly OriginalR. Clay, Bread Street Hill for] Samuel Holdsworth, Amen Corner, Paternoster Row., 1840 - 470 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 97.
Strana ix
... mind of the reader . It would require a great stretch of credulity to believe that there was even a remote coincidence between the original passages and most of the passages often quoted as parallel . It is doubtful to me , if Milton ...
... mind of the reader . It would require a great stretch of credulity to believe that there was even a remote coincidence between the original passages and most of the passages often quoted as parallel . It is doubtful to me , if Milton ...
Strana x
... mind and memory . I have ob- served the same rule , in a great degree , as to the scriptural authori- ties . Translations of the passages quoted from the classics I have also omitted , because to the learned reader they are unnecessary ...
... mind and memory . I have ob- served the same rule , in a great degree , as to the scriptural authori- ties . Translations of the passages quoted from the classics I have also omitted , because to the learned reader they are unnecessary ...
Strana xi
... mind at home , in the spacious circuits of her musing , hath liberty to propose to herself , though of highest hope , and hardest attempting ; whether that epic form , whereof the two poems of Homer , and those other two of Virgil and ...
... mind at home , in the spacious circuits of her musing , hath liberty to propose to herself , though of highest hope , and hardest attempting ; whether that epic form , whereof the two poems of Homer , and those other two of Virgil and ...
Strana xiii
... mind those two destinies which the oracle of Delphi announced to the son of Thetis : I considered that many had purchased a less good by a greater evil , the meed of glory by the loss of life ; but that I might procure great good by ...
... mind those two destinies which the oracle of Delphi announced to the son of Thetis : I considered that many had purchased a less good by a greater evil , the meed of glory by the loss of life ; but that I might procure great good by ...
Strana xiv
... mind , beneath which he must deject and plunge himself , that can agree to saleable and unlawful prostitu- tions . Next ( for hear me out now , readers ) that I may tell ye whither my young feet wandered , I betook me among those lofty ...
... mind , beneath which he must deject and plunge himself , that can agree to saleable and unlawful prostitu- tions . Next ( for hear me out now , readers ) that I may tell ye whither my young feet wandered , I betook me among those lofty ...
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Milton's Paradise Lost: With Copious Notes, Explanatory and Critical, Partly ... John Milton Úplné zobrazenie - 1840 |
Časté výrazy a frázy
Adam Adam and Eve Æneid Alcinous Almighty ancient angels beast beauty behold Bentley bliss bright call'd called Cherubim Cicero classical cloud comma creatures dark death delight divine earth edition eternal Euripides evil expression eyes fair Fairy Queen Father fire fruit glory gods grace Greek happy hast hath heaven heavenly hell Hesiod hill Homer honour Iliad imitation Jupiter king Latin light live Livy Lord Lord Monboddo means Milton mind morning nature Newton night o'er Ovid pain Paradise Lost passage Pearce poem poetic poets Psalm return'd round Satan says Scripture seem'd sense serpent Shakspeare sight soon spake spirits stars stood sweet taste thee thence things thou thought throne tion tree trochee verb verse viii Virg Virgil winds wings words δε εν μεν τε