Complete Poems and Major Prose, Volume 1957TEXTBOOK CONTAINING THE COMPLETE POEMS AND MAJOR PROSE OF JOHN MILTON. |
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Page 75
120 The story of Cambuscan bold , of Camball , and of Algársife , And who had Canace to wife , Thầt own'd the virtuous Ring and Glass , And of the wondrous Horse of Brass , on which the Tartĺr King did ride ; 115 And if aught else great ...
120 The story of Cambuscan bold , of Camball , and of Algársife , And who had Canace to wife , Thầt own'd the virtuous Ring and Glass , And of the wondrous Horse of Brass , on which the Tartĺr King did ride ; 115 And if aught else great ...
Page 144
Ovid tells the story ( Met . VI , 317–81 ) of the 7. fee : fee simple , full legal possession . Lycian peasants who annoyed Latona when she was 11. “ Honest liberty , " said Milton in his letter to nursing Apollo and Diana ...
Ovid tells the story ( Met . VI , 317–81 ) of the 7. fee : fee simple , full legal possession . Lycian peasants who annoyed Latona when she was 11. “ Honest liberty , " said Milton in his letter to nursing Apollo and Diana ...
Page 198
In undertaking to retell the story of the fall he asked for inspiration by the Spirit that the opening verses of Genesis describe as brooding on the waters when the earth “ was without form and void . ” In Book I he called his Muse ...
In undertaking to retell the story of the fall he asked for inspiration by the Spirit that the opening verses of Genesis describe as brooding on the waters when the earth “ was without form and void . ” In Book I he called his Muse ...
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User Review - jsburbidge - LibraryThingThis is pretty well the standard edition of Milton, with a critically established text, a reasonable level of apparatus for non-expert readers, and a critical mass of Milton's work extending beyond his major works to everything that anyone who is not a specialist is likely to need. Read full review
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User Review - selfcallednowhere - LibraryThingOk, so I didn't read this whole thing, obviously. But I did read "Paradise Lost" and that's the important thing, right? And I actually ended up enjoying it a lot more than I expected to. The language ... Read full review
Contents
Poems | 2 |
The Fifth Ode of Horace | 10 |
Elegia Tertia Elegy III | 21 |
Copyright | |
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Adam angels appear arms Book bring called callid cause Christ comes Compare Comus dark death described divine Earth evil eyes fair faith fall Father fear fire follow give glory gods Greek ground hand happy hast hath head heart Heav'n Hell honor hope human Italy John keep kind King land Latin learned less light lines live look Lord Lost meaning Milton mind Muses nature never night notes once Paradise perhaps poem reason reference regarded rest Samson Satan says seems sight song soon soul speaks Spirit stand stars stood story strength sweet tell thee things thir thou thought tradition Tree true truth turn universe VIII virtue