Paradise Lost: Books V and VI (1910)The University Press, 1910 |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-5 מתוך 34
עמוד xiii
... later in the term . He spoke of the incident bitterly at the time in one of his Latin poems , and he spoke of Cambridge bitterly in after years . On the other hand he voluntarily passed seven years at the University , and resented ...
... later in the term . He spoke of the incident bitterly at the time in one of his Latin poems , and he spoke of Cambridge bitterly in after years . On the other hand he voluntarily passed seven years at the University , and resented ...
עמוד xvii
... later : " I determined to relinquish the other pursuits in which I was engaged , and to transfer the whole force of my talents and my industry to this one important object " ( i.e. the vindication of liberty ) . The summer of 1639 ...
... later : " I determined to relinquish the other pursuits in which I was engaged , and to transfer the whole force of my talents and my industry to this one important object " ( i.e. the vindication of liberty ) . The summer of 1639 ...
עמוד xxvi
... later ( 1629--30 ) , from attempting to sound the deepest mysteries of Christianity- the Nativity and the Passion of Christ ; howbeit , sensible of his immaturity , he left his poem on the latter subject unfinished1 . The Sonnet to ...
... later ( 1629--30 ) , from attempting to sound the deepest mysteries of Christianity- the Nativity and the Passion of Christ ; howbeit , sensible of his immaturity , he left his poem on the latter subject unfinished1 . The Sonnet to ...
עמוד xxvii
... later we find a similar admission- " I have neither yet completed to my mind the full circle of my private studies ... 3 . " This last sentence was written in 1640 ( or 1641 ) . Meanwhile his resolution had been confirmed by the ...
... later we find a similar admission- " I have neither yet completed to my mind the full circle of my private studies ... 3 . " This last sentence was written in 1640 ( or 1641 ) . Meanwhile his resolution had been confirmed by the ...
עמוד xxix
... the King . The general drift of the last verses is that he will give up Latin for English verse ; strides is a future , from strido ( cf. Eneid IV . 689 ) . passes to the most fascinating of the later cycles of PARADISE LOST . xxix.
... the King . The general drift of the last verses is that he will give up Latin for English verse ; strides is a future , from strido ( cf. Eneid IV . 689 ) . passes to the most fascinating of the later cycles of PARADISE LOST . xxix.
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
Abdiel Adam Adamo Adamus allusion Almighty angels appeared archangel arms Asmodeus battle Beelzebub behold blank verse book of Tobit bright Cædmon Chaos chariot Cherub Cherubim chorus Christian Doct Comus Cotgrave Deity discourse divine Dryden Earth edition Elizabethan Empyrean English epic eternal evil fall Father Faust-book Faustus fire flaming foes Gabriel golden hast hath Heaven Heavenly Hell Henry Lawes honour host Hymn Isai Italian Keightley King Latin light lines Lucifer Lycidas means Messiah metre Michael Milton Newton night Nisroch noun Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage perhaps Phineas Fletcher planets poem poet poetry prose Raphael Reginald Scot rhyme ruin Samson Agonistes Satan says scene seems sense Seraphim Shak Sonnet spake Spenser Spheres spirit stood sweet taste thee things thou thought throne tragedy trochee whence wings wont words writers