The Poetical Works of John Milton, Nide 3Macmillan, 1893 |
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Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 58
Sivu 82
... Shakespeare , Fancy's child , Warble his native wood - notes wild . " -- words which , so far as Milton's appreciation of Shakespeare is concerned , would seem poor , if we did not recollect the splendid lines which he had previously ...
... Shakespeare , Fancy's child , Warble his native wood - notes wild . " -- words which , so far as Milton's appreciation of Shakespeare is concerned , would seem poor , if we did not recollect the splendid lines which he had previously ...
Sivu 83
... Shakespeare had remained to be written now , do I think he would have judged it opportune to write them . Certainly he would not now have written the masques for actual performance , public or private . And yet he had not abandoned his ...
... Shakespeare had remained to be written now , do I think he would have judged it opportune to write them . Certainly he would not now have written the masques for actual performance , public or private . And yet he had not abandoned his ...
Sivu 85
... Shakespeare in his Eikonoklastes , published in 1649 , suggests that , it he had not then really abated his allegiance to Shakespeare , he at least agreed so far with the ordinary Puritanism around him as not to think Shakespeare ...
... Shakespeare in his Eikonoklastes , published in 1649 , suggests that , it he had not then really abated his allegiance to Shakespeare , he at least agreed so far with the ordinary Puritanism around him as not to think Shakespeare ...
Sivu 89
... Shakespeare , as well as to Dryden and the other post- Restoration dramatists . All Samson Agonistes , therefore , was offered to the world as a tragedy avowedly of a different order from that which had been established in England . It ...
... Shakespeare , as well as to Dryden and the other post- Restoration dramatists . All Samson Agonistes , therefore , was offered to the world as a tragedy avowedly of a different order from that which had been established in England . It ...
Sivu 151
... Shakespeare's vocabulary in his Plays and Poems consists of about 15,000 words . The greater extent of Shakespeare's poetical vocabulary , as com- pared with Milton's , may be accounted for partly by the greater bulk of the poetical ...
... Shakespeare's vocabulary in his Plays and Poems consists of about 15,000 words . The greater extent of Shakespeare's poetical vocabulary , as com- pared with Milton's , may be accounted for partly by the greater bulk of the poetical ...
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Adam adjective allusion Amphibrach ancient Angels Bethabara Blank Verse Book called Caphtor Chaos Chor Chorus Christ's Comus Corineus Dagon daughter death dramatic Earth English epic Euripides father giant glory goddess Greek hast hath Heaven Hebrew Hell honour Iambic Iambus Introd Italian Jupiter Keightley King L'Allegro Latin legend lines lords Lycidas meaning metre metrical Milton mind Muse Nazarite occurs once original edition Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parthian Parthian Empire passage peculiar perhaps Philistines phrase poem poet poetical prose Psalm reference rhyme Roman Sams Samson Agonistes Satan Scripture sense Shakespeare shalt song Sonnet speech spelling spelt Spenser sphere Spirit Spondee stanza star strength supposed syllable syntax Temptation Thammuz thee things thou art thought throne tion Tragedy trisyllabic Trochee verb Warton whole word writers