The Poetical Works of John Milton: With Notes of Various Authors, Том 2C. and J. Rivington; J. Cuthell; J. Nunn; J. and W.T. Clarke; Longman and Company; ... [and 17 others], 1826 |
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Страница xx
... notice of , misrepresented Virgil's way of thinking as to this par ticular , in the translation he has given us of the Eneid . I do not remember that Homer any where falls into the faults above mentioned , which were indeed the false ...
... notice of , misrepresented Virgil's way of thinking as to this par ticular , in the translation he has given us of the Eneid . I do not remember that Homer any where falls into the faults above mentioned , which were indeed the false ...
Страница xxv
... notice , that there are in Milton several words of his own coining , as Cerberean , miscreated , hell - doomed , embryon , and many others . If the reader is offended at this liberty in our English poet , I would recommend him to a dis ...
... notice , that there are in Milton several words of his own coining , as Cerberean , miscreated , hell - doomed , embryon , and many others . If the reader is offended at this liberty in our English poet , I would recommend him to a dis ...
Страница xxxiv
... notice of in Milton's style , is the frequent use of what the learned call technical words , or terms of art . It is one of the greatest beauties of poetry , to make hard things intelligible , and to deliver what is abstruse of itself ...
... notice of in Milton's style , is the frequent use of what the learned call technical words , or terms of art . It is one of the greatest beauties of poetry , to make hard things intelligible , and to deliver what is abstruse of itself ...
Страница xxxv
... notice of such beauties as appear to me more exquisite than the rest . Milton has proposed the subject of his Poem in the first six verses . These lines are perhaps as plain , simple , and un- adorned , as any of the whole Poem , in ...
... notice of such beauties as appear to me more exquisite than the rest . Milton has proposed the subject of his Poem in the first six verses . These lines are perhaps as plain , simple , and un- adorned , as any of the whole Poem , in ...
Страница xxxvi
... notices also the change and confusion of the fallen Angels , most artfully expressed in the abruptness of the beginning of Satan's speech : " If thou beest he ; that Beëlzebub ! -He stops ; and falls into a bitter reflection on their ...
... notices also the change and confusion of the fallen Angels , most artfully expressed in the abruptness of the beginning of Satan's speech : " If thou beest he ; that Beëlzebub ! -He stops ; and falls into a bitter reflection on their ...
Често срещани думи и фрази
Adam Adam and Eve Æneas Æneid Almighty ancient Angels appear arms beauty Belial Bentley blank verse bright CALLANDER called Chaos Compare criticks darkness Death delight described divine DUNSTER earth edit epick Euripides evil expression fable Faer Faerie Queene fall fire flowers Gier give glory gods happy hast hath Heaven heavenly Hell heroick Hesiod Homer horrour HUME Ibid Iliad imitation infernal Italian King Latin light Lord manner Milton mind Moloch nature NEWTON night numbers o'er observed Ovid pain Paradise Lost passage PEARCE perhaps poem poet poetical poetry reader remarks RICHARDSON Satan says Scripture seem'd seems sense sentiments Shakspeare simile song spake speaking speech Spenser Spirits STILLINGFLEET stood sublime superiour sweet syllable Tasso terrour thee things thou thought throne THYER TODD verse Virgil wings word δὲ καὶ