Paradise Lost: A Poem in Twelve Books |
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Side viii
Therefore I have been bola to trouble you with a few lines to Mr. M. B. whom you
shall easily find at tending the young Lord S. as his governor ; and you may
surely receive from him good directions for the shaping of your farther journey
into ...
Therefore I have been bola to trouble you with a few lines to Mr. M. B. whom you
shall easily find at tending the young Lord S. as his governor ; and you may
surely receive from him good directions for the shaping of your farther journey
into ...
Side ix
In any part where I shall understand you fixed , I shall be glad , and diligent to
entertain you with home - novelties , even for fome fomentation of our friendship ,
too foon interrupted in the cradle . " pame . Soon after this he set out upon his ...
In any part where I shall understand you fixed , I shall be glad , and diligent to
entertain you with home - novelties , even for fome fomentation of our friendship ,
too foon interrupted in the cradle . " pame . Soon after this he set out upon his ...
Side li
And in Paradise Lost we shall find nothing upon this head that is not perfectly
agreeable to Scripture . Dr. Trapp , who was as likely to cry out upon heresy as
any man , asserts that the poem is orthodox in ' tery part of it ; or otherwise he
would ...
And in Paradise Lost we shall find nothing upon this head that is not perfectly
agreeable to Scripture . Dr. Trapp , who was as likely to cry out upon heresy as
any man , asserts that the poem is orthodox in ' tery part of it ; or otherwise he
would ...
Side lviii
This night , distinguifh'd by your smile , Mall tell , That never BRITON can in vain.
excel ; The flighted arts futurity shall trust , And rising ages haften to be just . At
length our mighty Bard's victorious lays Fill the loud voice of universal praise ;
And ...
This night , distinguifh'd by your smile , Mall tell , That never BRITON can in vain.
excel ; The flighted arts futurity shall trust , And rising ages haften to be just . At
length our mighty Bard's victorious lays Fill the loud voice of universal praise ;
And ...
Side lix
To this Life from Dr. Newton , we shall subjoin an account of the manner in which
Milton lost his fighty which he fo pathetically laments in the beginning of book iii .
of Paradise Lost , taken from his own letter to Leonard Philaras , envoy from the ...
To this Life from Dr. Newton , we shall subjoin an account of the manner in which
Milton lost his fighty which he fo pathetically laments in the beginning of book iii .
of Paradise Lost , taken from his own letter to Leonard Philaras , envoy from the ...
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LibraryThing Review
Brugeranmeldelse - VivalaErin - LibraryThingThe shortest answer is: John Milton was a poetic genius. PL is so beautiful, you can't help but feel for Adam and Eve. Even Satan is a great character - he so wants to be an epic hero. This poem is a masterpiece, and he wrote it completely blind. Beautiful, absolutely amazing. Læs hele anmeldelsen
LibraryThing Review
Brugeranmeldelse - StefanY - LibraryThingHistorical significance and beautifully descriptive prose aside, I couldn't get into this book at all. Maybe it's too much familiarity with the plot or the inevitability of the impending doom of the ... Læs hele anmeldelsen
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
Adam againſt alſo angel appear arms behold beſt bring callid cloud created dark death deep delight divine doubt dwell earth equal eternal evil eyes fair faith fall Father fear field fight fire firſt fome fons fruit glory gods grace hand happy haſt hath head heard heart heav'n hell hill himſelf hope houſe Italy King land laſt late Latin learned leave leſs light live look loſt mean Milton mind morn moſt muſt nature never night once pain Paradiſe peace perhaps reaſon receive reſt round ſaid Satan ſay ſeems ſeveral ſhall ſhape ſhe ſhould ſome ſpirit ſtate ſtill ſtood ſuch ſweet taſte thee thence theſe things thoſe thou thought throne till tree virtue voice whoſe wide wings