Paradise Lost, Bog 1Ginn & Company, 1891 - 423 sider |
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Side xv
... says of Heaven is said symbolically , and in order to make conceivable by the human imagination what in its own nature is inconceivable ; but , this being explained , he is bold enough in his use of terrestrial analogies . Round the ...
... says of Heaven is said symbolically , and in order to make conceivable by the human imagination what in its own nature is inconceivable ; but , this being explained , he is bold enough in his use of terrestrial analogies . Round the ...
Side xxi
... says , " Then Tartarus itself sinks deep down and extends towards the shades twice as far as is the prospect upward to the ethereal throne of Heaven " * In a foot - note on this passage Masson adds , " Heaven or the Empyrean being ...
... says , " Then Tartarus itself sinks deep down and extends towards the shades twice as far as is the prospect upward to the ethereal throne of Heaven " * In a foot - note on this passage Masson adds , " Heaven or the Empyrean being ...
Side xxii
... says , " It is observable that Homer makes the seat of Hell as far beneath the deepest pit of Earth as the Heaven is above the Earth . Virgil makes it twice as far , and Milton thrice as far ; as . if these three great poets had ...
... says , " It is observable that Homer makes the seat of Hell as far beneath the deepest pit of Earth as the Heaven is above the Earth . Virgil makes it twice as far , and Milton thrice as far ; as . if these three great poets had ...
Side xxviii
... say that according to Milton's con- ception the former is the archetype after which the latter was made . Standing at a little distance , the fallen spirits could see it " Built like a temple , where pilasters round Were xxviii ...
... say that according to Milton's con- ception the former is the archetype after which the latter was made . Standing at a little distance , the fallen spirits could see it " Built like a temple , where pilasters round Were xxviii ...
Side 3
... Says 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 ...
... Says 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 ...
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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