Considerations on Milton's Early Reading, and the Prima Stamina of His Paradise Lost: Together With Extracts From a Poet of the Sixteenth Century; In a Letter to William Falconer, M.D (Classic Reprint)

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FB&C Limited, Jul 3, 2016 - History - 256 pages
Excerpt from Considerations on Milton's Early Reading, and the Prima Stamina of His Paradise Lost: Together With Extracts From a Poet of the Sixteenth Century; In a Letter to William Falconer, M.D

If to min were to commend, my nrslfe Might then both thee, thy work, and merit nife 3 But as it is, (the child of ignorance, And utter Granger to all airs of France How can! (peak of thy great pains but err? Sines they can only judge, that can confer. Behold l the rev'rcnd {bade of Bartas (lands Before my thought, and in my right commands, t l 'l That to the world l publith for him this, A Bartas doth with thy Englith now were So well in that are his inventions wrought, As bis will new.be the trayhm'm thought; Thine the origin]; and France (ball boaft No more the maiden glories the has loll, . B. Jenest.

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