The Poetical Works of Milton, Young, Gray, Beattie, and Collins: Complete in One Volume |
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Page ix
... thoughts close and his countenance open . He had visited Gali- leo , a prisoner to the Inquisition , for asserting the motion of the earth , and thinking otherwise in as- tronomy than the Dominicans and Franciscans thought . And though ...
... thoughts close and his countenance open . He had visited Gali- leo , a prisoner to the Inquisition , for asserting the motion of the earth , and thinking otherwise in as- tronomy than the Dominicans and Franciscans thought . And though ...
Page x
... thought himself by ercise for his pupils was for the most part to read Bishop Hall , or his son . And here very luckily a chapter of Greek Testament , and to hear his ended a controversy , which detained him from learned exposition of ...
... thought himself by ercise for his pupils was for the most part to read Bishop Hall , or his son . And here very luckily a chapter of Greek Testament , and to hear his ended a controversy , which detained him from learned exposition of ...
Page xiii
... thought himself an advocate for true liberty , for ecclesiastical liber- ty in his treatises against the bishops ... thought became Milton the least of all men to bring such it an indignity and meanness to which this or any an accusation ...
... thought himself an advocate for true liberty , for ecclesiastical liber- ty in his treatises against the bishops ... thought became Milton the least of all men to bring such it an indignity and meanness to which this or any an accusation ...
Page xix
... thought upon the subject , and king Arthur had another it no mean employment , nor unworthy of a man fate , being reserved for the pen of Sir Richard of genius , to be an editor of the works of great Blackmore . The first hint of ...
... thought upon the subject , and king Arthur had another it no mean employment , nor unworthy of a man fate , being reserved for the pen of Sir Richard of genius , to be an editor of the works of great Blackmore . The first hint of ...
Page xxii
... thought of Paradise Re- Thomas Power , Fellow of Trinity College , in gained was owing to Elwood the Quaker , as he Cambridge , the first book of which was printed himself relates the occasion in the history of his in 1691 , and the ...
... thought of Paradise Re- Thomas Power , Fellow of Trinity College , in gained was owing to Elwood the Quaker , as he Cambridge , the first book of which was printed himself relates the occasion in the history of his in 1691 , and the ...
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