Paradise Lost, Bog 1Ginn & Company, 1891 - 423 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 40
Side 3
... Keightley , " The verse of Mil- ton and the great dramatists is not decasyllabic , but five - foot ; besides the two dissyllabic feet it admits two trisyllabic , namely , the anapest ( - ) and the amphibrach ( ~ — ~ ) , which feet may ...
... Keightley , " The verse of Mil- ton and the great dramatists is not decasyllabic , but five - foot ; besides the two dissyllabic feet it admits two trisyllabic , namely , the anapest ( - ) and the amphibrach ( ~ — ~ ) , which feet may ...
Side 7
... Keightley , " he probably means the genius and charac- ter , the divinely animated power , of the Hebrew poetry , as displayed in the Pentateuch by Moses , in the Psalms , etc. , by David and others . " Professor Himes ( Study of Par ...
... Keightley , " he probably means the genius and charac- ter , the divinely animated power , of the Hebrew poetry , as displayed in the Pentateuch by Moses , in the Psalms , etc. , by David and others . " Professor Himes ( Study of Par ...
Side 9
... Keightley suggests that in this double invocation Milton had in view something similar in Fletcher's Purple Island ( VI . 25 ) . In Job xxxii . 8 , we read , " But there is a spirit in man ; and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth ...
... Keightley suggests that in this double invocation Milton had in view something similar in Fletcher's Purple Island ( VI . 25 ) . In Job xxxii . 8 , we read , " But there is a spirit in man ; and the inspiration of the Almighty giveth ...
Side 11
... Keightley puts an interrogation mark after will , and makes ' for ' but for , as if modifying ' lords . ' Others interpret ' for ' as equivalent to on account of , modifying ' transgress . ' Which is preferable ? What is the ' restraint ...
... Keightley puts an interrogation mark after will , and makes ' for ' but for , as if modifying ' lords . ' Others interpret ' for ' as equivalent to on account of , modifying ' transgress . ' Which is preferable ? What is the ' restraint ...
Side 13
... Keightley , accordingly , suggests that the phrase may have been a popular one about that time . " Mr. Keightley has a rather slender foundation for his conjecture ; a single instance , and that twenty or twenty - five years before ...
... Keightley , accordingly , suggests that the phrase may have been a popular one about that time . " Mr. Keightley has a rather slender foundation for his conjecture ; a single instance , and that twenty or twenty - five years before ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
abyss Æneid Æschylus Almighty amphibrach anapest ancient angels Beelzebub behold Belial Boeotia burning cæsura called centre cents Chaos Cloth College Comus critics darkness death deep devils Dict edition Empyrean Eneid English Literature epic eternal Exod Faerie Queene fiery fire flowers gates glory gods Greek Hades hath Heaven to Earth hell Hesiod highth hill Himes Himes's Homer Iliad infernal Introduction Jerram Julius Cæsar Keightley King language Latin light Lycidas Mailing Price Masson meaning Milton Moloch Mount Helicon Muse night o'er Old Eng Pantheon Paradise Lost passage perhaps phrase poem poetical poetry poets Prof Professor prose rebel angels region Rhetoric rhyme river Satan says School seat seems sense Shakes Shakespeare song Sonnet sound Spenser spirits Starry Universe student style syllable Tartarus temple thee Theocritus thou thought throne thunder tion vast verse Virgil winds wings word