The Poetical Works of John MiltonMacmillan, 1911 - 625 pages |
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Results 1-5 of 81
Page 1
... Fire of London in September , 1666 , and it certainly cannot have been very long after that event , when Milton , then residing in Artillery Walk , Bunhill Fields , sent the manuscript of his Paradise Lost to receive the official ...
... Fire of London in September , 1666 , and it certainly cannot have been very long after that event , when Milton , then residing in Artillery Walk , Bunhill Fields , sent the manuscript of his Paradise Lost to receive the official ...
Page 13
... fire of his altar to touch and purify " the lips of whom he pleases . To this must be added industrious and select reading , steady observation , insight into all seemly and generous arts and " affairs - till which in some measure be ...
... fire of his altar to touch and purify " the lips of whom he pleases . To this must be added industrious and select reading , steady observation , insight into all seemly and generous arts and " affairs - till which in some measure be ...
Page 15
... Fire of Sept. 1666 ; and there were difficulties , as we have seen , about the licensing of a poem by a person of Milton's political antecedents and principles . Whether the time spent by Milton in the composition of Paradise Lost was ...
... Fire of Sept. 1666 ; and there were difficulties , as we have seen , about the licensing of a poem by a person of Milton's political antecedents and principles . Whether the time spent by Milton in the composition of Paradise Lost was ...
Page 20
... Fire , but only a vast pulp or welter of unformed matter , in which all these lie tem- pestuously intermixed ... fires . But his purpose is not utterly to destroy them , only to expel them from Heaven . Underneath 20 INTRODUCTION TO ...
... Fire , but only a vast pulp or welter of unformed matter , in which all these lie tem- pestuously intermixed ... fires . But his purpose is not utterly to destroy them , only to expel them from Heaven . Underneath 20 INTRODUCTION TO ...
Page 23
... fire , " through what of Chaos remains ; and , after much farther flying , tacking , and steering , he at last reaches the upper confines of Chaos , where its substance seems thinner , so that he can wing about more easily , and where a ...
... fire , " through what of Chaos remains ; and , after much farther flying , tacking , and steering , he at last reaches the upper confines of Chaos , where its substance seems thinner , so that he can wing about more easily , and where a ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adam Angels arms aught behold bliss BOOK bright called Cambridge Chaos Chor Christ's Christ's College cloud Comus dark death deep delight Diodati divine dread dwell Earth edition Elegy Empyrean English eternal evil eyes fair Father fear friends fruit glory grace hand happy Harefield hath heard heart Heaven Heavenly Hell Henry Lawes highth hill honour Italian John Milton King Lady Latin Lawes light live Long Parliament Lord Ludlow Castle Lycidas masque Milton mind night Note o'er Paradise Lost Paradise Regained perhaps Petty France poem poet praise reign replied round Samson Samson Agonistes Satan seems Serpent shalt sight song Sonnet soon spake Spirit stars stood Stowmarket sweet taste thee thence thine things thou art thou hast thought throne thyself tree verse voice Westminster Assembly whence wings wonder words