Milton's Paradise Lost: Books I and II, كتاب 1Silver, Burdett and Company, 1897 - 80 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 38
الصفحة vii
... mind . The poems in which he first showed his poetic genius were lyric and dra- matic , but early in life he had conceived the idea of rivalling the fame of Homer and Virgil , and becoming the epic representative of his native land and ...
... mind . The poems in which he first showed his poetic genius were lyric and dra- matic , but early in life he had conceived the idea of rivalling the fame of Homer and Virgil , and becoming the epic representative of his native land and ...
الصفحة ix
... mind . In such leisure as his busy life afforded , he was still trying to determine the subject of his great work and the form in which it was to be composed . Out of the many possible subjects that seemed suitable to his genius he at ...
... mind . In such leisure as his busy life afforded , he was still trying to determine the subject of his great work and the form in which it was to be composed . Out of the many possible subjects that seemed suitable to his genius he at ...
الصفحة x
... mind , and came to the conclusion that an epic poem would be the best means of delivering to his contemporaries and posterity all the higher and brighter ideas that had not ceased to revolve in his brain all the time during which he ...
... mind , and came to the conclusion that an epic poem would be the best means of delivering to his contemporaries and posterity all the higher and brighter ideas that had not ceased to revolve in his brain all the time during which he ...
الصفحة xiv
... mind was thoroughly saturated with the spirit of that early poet , and that to this Anglo- Saxon original Milton was to a considerable extent indebted for the frame - work of his epic . The chief fact that militates against this ...
... mind was thoroughly saturated with the spirit of that early poet , and that to this Anglo- Saxon original Milton was to a considerable extent indebted for the frame - work of his epic . The chief fact that militates against this ...
الصفحة xv
... been deeply impressed on his mind and reproduced afterwards . It is also possible that Sylves- ter's poem may have first distinctly suggested to him the idea of writing a great poem on a religious subject INTRODUCTION . XV.
... been deeply impressed on his mind and reproduced afterwards . It is also possible that Sylves- ter's poem may have first distinctly suggested to him the idea of writing a great poem on a religious subject INTRODUCTION . XV.
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
according adjective adverb Aeneid ancient arms army battle Beelzebub Belial bleating burning burning lake called Chaos Cherubim clause Compare darkness death deep Demogorgon derived described devils dread earth Egypt empyreal epic epithet equivalent eternal ethereal expressed fallen angels fear fire first-born flames force glory gods Greek mythology hath Heaven Hell highth hill Homer hope horrid hypallage imitating infernal instance intransitive Israelites Jehovah Keightley king lake Latin Mammon means Milton mind misery modern English Moloch mortal night nominative absolute noun noun sentence object ordinary pain Paradise Lost participle passage passive pathetic fallacy poem poet poetry preposition punishment race rebel angels regarded reign Samson Agonistes Satan seems sense Seraphim sound spear speech Spirits suggests supposed Thammuz thee things thou thought throne thunder transitive verb utter verse Virgil Vondel's wind wings word worse writers zeugma