The Poetical Works of John MiltonJ. R. Osgood, 1874 |
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Page 106
... , or deliberate scheme and meaning of the Poem as a whole , which has been expounded so far , and in part put into diagram , in the Introduction . 107 . NOTES TO PRELIMINARY MATTER . 66 66 I. 106 Preface to the Notes .
... , or deliberate scheme and meaning of the Poem as a whole , which has been expounded so far , and in part put into diagram , in the Introduction . 107 . NOTES TO PRELIMINARY MATTER . 66 66 I. 106 Preface to the Notes .
Page 113
... Meaning mainly to defend his choice of Blank Verse for a poem of such an order , he may have let his expression sweep beyond the exact bounds of his intention . For , though he had used Blank Verse in his own earlier poetry , as in ...
... Meaning mainly to defend his choice of Blank Verse for a poem of such an order , he may have let his expression sweep beyond the exact bounds of his intention . For , though he had used Blank Verse in his own earlier poetry , as in ...
Page 115
... meaning of " brooding " in the passage , is said to occur in the Tal- mudists or Jewish commentators on the Bible . There may be a recol- lection also of Luke iii . 22 . 27. " Say first , " & c . Compared by Hume with Iliad , ii . 484-6 ...
... meaning of " brooding " in the passage , is said to occur in the Tal- mudists or Jewish commentators on the Bible . There may be a recol- lection also of Luke iii . 22 . 27. " Say first , " & c . Compared by Hume with Iliad , ii . 484-6 ...
Page 118
... meaning thus given to the last clause is languid compared with any one of those meanings which it will bear if the original punctuation is preserved . " All is not lost , " Satan then says ; " the unconquerable will & c . . . . and ...
... meaning thus given to the last clause is languid compared with any one of those meanings which it will bear if the original punctuation is preserved . " All is not lost , " Satan then says ; " the unconquerable will & c . . . . and ...
Page 120
... meaning of the word is to sink , or go to the bottom ( fundus ) ; but one can see the idea of the metaphor— swallowed up and lost in the darkness . 207. " under the lee , " i.e. on that side of the monster which was pro- tected from the ...
... meaning of the word is to sink , or go to the bottom ( fundus ) ; but one can see the idea of the metaphor— swallowed up and lost in the darkness . 207. " under the lee , " i.e. on that side of the monster which was pro- tected from the ...
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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