Paradise Lost0: A Poem in Twelve Books. 2 |
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Side 9
On Adam last thus judgment he pronounc'd : Because thou haft hearken'd to the
voice of thy wife ; And eaten of the tree , concerning which I charg'd thee , saying ,
thou shalt not eat thereof : Curs'd is the ground for thy fake : , thou in forrow ...
On Adam last thus judgment he pronounc'd : Because thou haft hearken'd to the
voice of thy wife ; And eaten of the tree , concerning which I charg'd thee , saying ,
thou shalt not eat thereof : Curs'd is the ground for thy fake : , thou in forrow ...
Side 10
1 now 1 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread , 205 Till thou return unto the
ground ; for thou Out of the ground wast taken , know thy birth , For dust thou art ,
and shalt to dust return . So judg'd he Man , both Judge and Saviour sent ; And ...
1 now 1 In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread , 205 Till thou return unto the
ground ; for thou Out of the ground wast taken , know thy birth , For dust thou art ,
and shalt to dust return . So judg'd he Man , both Judge and Saviour sent ; And ...
Side 37
On the ground 850 Outstretch'd he lay , on the cold ground , and oft Curs'd his
creation ; Death as oft accus'd Of tardy execution , since denounc'd The day of his
offence . Why comes not Death , Said he , with one thrice acceptable firoke 855 ...
On the ground 850 Outstretch'd he lay , on the cold ground , and oft Curs'd his
creation ; Death as oft accus'd Of tardy execution , since denounc'd The day of his
offence . Why comes not Death , Said he , with one thrice acceptable firoke 855 ...
Side 45
... Fruit of thy womb ; on me the curse aflope ear Glanc'd on the ground ; with
labor I must Book . X. 45 PARADISE Lost .
... Fruit of thy womb ; on me the curse aflope ear Glanc'd on the ground ; with
labor I must Book . X. 45 PARADISE Lost .
Side 46
ear Glanc'd on the ground ; with labor I must earn My bread : what harm ?
Idleness had been worfe : 1055 My labor will sustain me : and left cold Or heat
should injure us , his timely care Hath unbesought provided ; and his hànds Cloth
'd us ...
ear Glanc'd on the ground ; with labor I must earn My bread : what harm ?
Idleness had been worfe : 1055 My labor will sustain me : and left cold Or heat
should injure us , his timely care Hath unbesought provided ; and his hànds Cloth
'd us ...
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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 Angels arms behold beſt better BOOK bounds bring brought callid cloud comes death deeds deep deſcended doubt dwell earth evil eyes fair faith fall fame Father fear fell fight fire firſt fruit glory grace ground hand haſt hath head hear heard heart Heav'n Hell hill himſelf hold hope juſt king kingdom land laſt late leave leſs light live Lord loſt mankind means mind moſt muſt nature night once Paradiſe peace plain pow'r race reign reply'd reſt return'd Satan Saviour ſaw ſea ſeat ſee ſeek ſeems ſet ſhall ſhalt ſhould ſome ſon ſoon ſtand ſtate ſtill ſtood ſuch Tempter thee themſelves thence theſe things thoſe thou art thought throne till tree true truth virtue voice waſte whoſe wide