| William Riley Parker - 1996 - 708 str.
...thought of his own efforts at reform, and the cold reception they had met with from persons in authority. But what more oft in nations grown corrupt And by...servitude Than to love bondage more than liberty, Bondage with ease than strenuous liberty, And to despise, or envy, or suspect Whom God hath of His... | |
| Harold Acton - 1997 - 676 str.
...napoletano doveva essere «convcrtito» volente o nolente, si ispirarono come testo al Samson Agonistes: But what more oft, in nations grown corrupt, And by...servitude, Than to love bondage more than liberty, Bondage with ease than strenuous liberty.1 Essi vedevano vizi ovunque: Napoli era un paradiso popolato... | |
| Reuben Sánchez - 1997 - 264 str.
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| Robert Oresko, G. C. Gibbs, H. M. Scott - 1997 - 706 str.
...to practise the civic virtues. That true seventeenth-century republican, John Milton, knew it well: But what more oft, in Nations grown corrupt, And by...servitude, Than to love Bondage more than Liberty, Bondage with ease, than strenuous Liberty . . . 41 Yet love for bondage with ease was not the whole... | |
| John Milton - 1999 - 1024 str.
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| Steven N. Zwicker - 1998 - 362 str.
...lack of discipline and morale, both before and after falling into servitude to foreign oppressors: But what more oft in nations grown corrupt, And by...servitude, Than to love bondage more than liberty, Bondage with ease than strenuous liberty. (Samson Agonistes, lines 269-72) The part of the Book of... | |
| George Eliot - 1909 - 398 str.
...lines of the "Samson Agonistes" to which it did perfect justice — PERSISTENCY IN APPLICATION [WITLET "But what more oft in nations grown corrupt. And by...servitude. Than to love bondage more than liberty, — Bondage with ease than strenuous liberty." The delighted conviction of justice in the thought —... | |
| Karin Friedrich - 2000 - 316 str.
...Ducal Prussian estates with Hohenzollern central power a century earlier; it was, in Milton's words: 'what more oft in Nations grown corrupt, And by their...servitude. Than to love Bondage more than Liberty, Bondage with an ease than strenuous Liberty."6 It is no coincidence that this was the exact opposite... | |
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