The Poetical Works of John MiltonJ. R. Osgood, 1874 |
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Página 117
... imagination , is supposed to begin . " The centre Earth , or the Earth's centre : " the utmost pole " is not the Earth's pole , but the pole of the entire Starry Universe . Homer ( Iliad , viii . 16 ) makes Tartarus just as far beneath ...
... imagination , is supposed to begin . " The centre Earth , or the Earth's centre : " the utmost pole " is not the Earth's pole , but the pole of the entire Starry Universe . Homer ( Iliad , viii . 16 ) makes Tartarus just as far beneath ...
Página 126
... imagination , helped by the mere mention of Crete , Ida , Olympus , Delphi , and Dodona . Observe too that the original theo- gonies of the lands west of Greece - Italy , Spain , Gaul , and the British Islands are represented as ...
... imagination , helped by the mere mention of Crete , Ida , Olympus , Delphi , and Dodona . Observe too that the original theo- gonies of the lands west of Greece - Italy , Spain , Gaul , and the British Islands are represented as ...
Página 129
... imagination of the whereabouts of the Fallen Angels . They are down in Hell ; above them and Hell is Chaos or the Abyss , as Satan has just hinted ( line 658 ) ; and above that is Heaven . In their defiance they look upwards to Hell's ...
... imagination of the whereabouts of the Fallen Angels . They are down in Hell ; above them and Hell is Chaos or the Abyss , as Satan has just hinted ( line 658 ) ; and above that is Heaven . In their defiance they look upwards to Hell's ...
Página 132
... far within , it is only by some such reduction of the general body as in the text that the imagination can conceive the hall holding all the vast multitude . BOOK II . • 2 , 3. " Ormus and 132 [ BOOK I. Notes to Paradise Lost .
... far within , it is only by some such reduction of the general body as in the text that the imagination can conceive the hall holding all the vast multitude . BOOK II . • 2 , 3. " Ormus and 132 [ BOOK I. Notes to Paradise Lost .
Página 139
... imagining Hell from the outside ? 439. “ unessential Night " : i.e. having no real substance or existence , -a kind of vast Non - entity or abortion of Being . 445. " I should ill become , " & c . Hume compares Sarpedon's speech , Iliad ...
... imagining Hell from the outside ? 439. “ unessential Night " : i.e. having no real substance or existence , -a kind of vast Non - entity or abortion of Being . 445. " I should ill become , " & c . Hume compares Sarpedon's speech , Iliad ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Æneid allusion ancient Angels antè Beelzebub Bentley Bishop Newton Book called Cambridge draft Chaos commentators Compare Comus Corineus daughter death Dunster Earth Elegy England English Euripides Faery Queene famous father goddess gods Greek Heaven Hell Horace Iliad Introd Italian Jupiter Keightley King L'Allegro Latin Latin poem legend Lord Lycidas Masque meaning meant mihi Milton Milton's editions Muse Newton quotes original edition original text Ovid Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parthian Parthian Empire passage perhaps phrase poetical poetry poets present printed Psalm Ptolemaic Ptolemaic system quæ reading recollection reference rhyme Roman round Satan says Scripture Second Edition seems sense Shakespeare sing song Sonnet speech spelt Spenser sphere spirit stanza star suggested supposed syllable thee thou Thyer tibi tion Todd quotes translation Universe verb verse viii Virgil Warton Warton noted whole word