Complete Poetical WorksHoughton Mifflin, 1965 - Počet stran: 570 Contains all of Milton's poetry, English, Latin, Greek, and Italian. |
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Výsledky 1-3 z 92
Strana 82
... ( lines 9-10 ) became current quite early , for example in Jonson's poem in the First Folio ( 1623 ) , although Jonson praised his art also ( cf. L'Allegro 131-34 ) . Milton doubtless remembered Jonson's line ( 22 ) : " Thou art a ...
... ( lines 9-10 ) became current quite early , for example in Jonson's poem in the First Folio ( 1623 ) , although Jonson praised his art also ( cf. L'Allegro 131-34 ) . Milton doubtless remembered Jonson's line ( 22 ) : " Thou art a ...
Strana 107
... lines return to the celestial vision . Obviously the whole poem works out a musical metaphor . As in On Time , the irregular lines and slow move- ment elicit full and fresh value from even the most ordinary words . The first 24 lines ...
... lines return to the celestial vision . Obviously the whole poem works out a musical metaphor . As in On Time , the irregular lines and slow move- ment elicit full and fresh value from even the most ordinary words . The first 24 lines ...
Strana 142
... lines 76–84 , yet at this point it does not bring assurance , and the pressure of doubt and fear continues and mounts . The several mourners widen , in oblique terms , the questioning of God's ways . The whole poem develops in a ...
... lines 76–84 , yet at this point it does not bring assurance , and the pressure of doubt and fear continues and mounts . The several mourners widen , in oblique terms , the questioning of God's ways . The whole poem develops in a ...
Obsah
To Charles Diodati | 9 |
On the Death of the Beadle of Cambridge | 16 |
In obitum Procancellarii medici On the Death of the ViceChancellor | 24 |
Autorská práva | |
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Adam Adam and Eve amorous angels Areopagitica arms behold bliss bright cloud Comus dark death deep divine earth Elegy eternal Euripides evil Exod eyes fair faith father Faunus fear flow'rs fruit glory glossary God's goddess gods grace Greek hand hath heard heart heav'n heav'nly hell Hesiod hill honor Il Penseroso Iliad Jove king L'Allegro Latin light live Lord lost Lycidas Matt mihi Milton mind Muse night numina o'er Odysseus Ovid Paradise Paradise Lost Paradise Regained peace perhaps Philistines Phoebus poem poet praise reign sacred Samson Satan serpent shade shalt sight Smectymnuus song Sonnet soon soul spake Spenser Spirit stars stood sweet thee thence Theocritus things thou art thou hast thought throne thyself tibi traditional tree verse Virgil virtue winds wings words Zeus