The Poetical Works of John MiltonJ. R. Osgood, 1874 |
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Page 199
... Warton , and Todd - as St. Augustine , Sannazaro , Tasso , & c . Nay in Shakespeare ( 1 Henry VI . , V. iii . ) Satan is " the monarch of the North . " 696. " He together calls " : i.e. His associate calls . The spelling is " Hee " in ...
... Warton , and Todd - as St. Augustine , Sannazaro , Tasso , & c . Nay in Shakespeare ( 1 Henry VI . , V. iii . ) Satan is " the monarch of the North . " 696. " He together calls " : i.e. His associate calls . The spelling is " Hee " in ...
Page 238
... Warton points out that Milton must have had before him , when he wrote this passage , the following description of the Banian in " Gerard's Herbal , " originally published in 1597 , but of which there had been later editions : " Of the ...
... Warton points out that Milton must have had before him , when he wrote this passage , the following description of the Banian in " Gerard's Herbal , " originally published in 1597 , but of which there had been later editions : " Of the ...
Page 281
... WARTON and JOSEPH WARTON , communicated to Todd by their nephew . Since Todd the only annotators of the Poem that need be mentioned here are MR . KEIGHTLEY , MR . R. C. BROWNE , and MR . J. M. Ross , ( see antè , p . 103 ) . The Notes ...
... WARTON and JOSEPH WARTON , communicated to Todd by their nephew . Since Todd the only annotators of the Poem that need be mentioned here are MR . KEIGHTLEY , MR . R. C. BROWNE , and MR . J. M. Ross , ( see antè , p . 103 ) . The Notes ...
Page 302
... side . Hence , as Warton pointed out , Cervantes in his Don Quixote refers to the siege very much as Milton here does : " Before we are two hours in these crossways , we shall 302 [ BOOK III . Notes to Paradise Regained .
... side . Hence , as Warton pointed out , Cervantes in his Don Quixote refers to the siege very much as Milton here does : " Before we are two hours in these crossways , we shall 302 [ BOOK III . Notes to Paradise Regained .
Page 319
... Warton thinks these four lines a rather feeble ending for the poem , and regrets that it did not end at line 635 . Few will agree with him . On the contrary , the quiet ending of the poem by the private or unmarked return of Christ to ...
... Warton thinks these four lines a rather feeble ending for the poem , and regrets that it did not end at line 635 . Few will agree with him . On the contrary , the quiet ending of the poem by the private or unmarked return of Christ to ...
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Æneid allusion ancient Angels antè Beelzebub Bentley Bishop Newton Book called Cambridge draft Chaos commentators Compare Comus Corineus daughter death Dunster Earth Elegy England English Euripides Faery Queene famous father goddess gods Greek Heaven Hell Horace Iliad Introd Italian Jupiter Keightley King L'Allegro Latin Latin poem legend Lord Lycidas Masque meaning meant mihi Milton Milton's editions Muse Newton quotes original edition original text Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parthian Parthian Empire passage perhaps phrase poetical poetry poets present printed Psalm Ptolemaic Ptolemaic system quæ reading recollection reference rhyme Roman round Satan says Scripture Second Edition seems sense Shakespeare sing song Sonnet speech spelt Spenser sphere spirit stanza star suggested supposed syllable thee thou Thyer tibi tion Todd quotes translation Universe verb verse viii Virgil Warton Warton noted whole word