Life of John Milton1810 |
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Página 67
... thou , Tarpeian poet , * cease to boast Thy Pompey's porch , and theatre's bright host . Let foreign nymphs the fruitless strife forbear : Beauty's first prize belongs to Britain's fair , Imperial London ! built by Trojan hands , With ...
... thou , Tarpeian poet , * cease to boast Thy Pompey's porch , and theatre's bright host . Let foreign nymphs the fruitless strife forbear : Beauty's first prize belongs to Britain's fair , Imperial London ! built by Trojan hands , With ...
Página 68
... thou accept , to cheat the present time , My pledge of love , these lines constrain'd to rhyme . As this translation was made during a period of peculiar soli citude , when my mind was fevered , or rather phrenzied with alter- nate ...
... thou accept , to cheat the present time , My pledge of love , these lines constrain'd to rhyme . As this translation was made during a period of peculiar soli citude , when my mind was fevered , or rather phrenzied with alter- nate ...
Página 79
... thou wast divine . VI . Resolve me then , O soul most surely blest ! ( If so it be that thou these plaints dost hear ) Tell me , bright Spirit , where'er thou hoverest , Whether above that high first moving sphere , Or in the Elysian ...
... thou wast divine . VI . Resolve me then , O soul most surely blest ! ( If so it be that thou these plaints dost hear ) Tell me , bright Spirit , where'er thou hoverest , Whether above that high first moving sphere , Or in the Elysian ...
Página 80
... thou , the mother of so sweet a child , HER false imagined loss cease to lament , & c . it is rather strange that both Tickell and Fenton should call this fair infant the NE- PHEW of our author . In the ode " On the Morning of Christ's ...
... thou , the mother of so sweet a child , HER false imagined loss cease to lament , & c . it is rather strange that both Tickell and Fenton should call this fair infant the NE- PHEW of our author . In the ode " On the Morning of Christ's ...
Página 83
... thou clothe my fancy in fit sound : Such where the deep transported mind may soar Above the wheeling poles , and at heaven's door Look in and see each blissful Deity , How he before the thunderous throne doth lie , & c . But whatever ...
... thou clothe my fancy in fit sound : Such where the deep transported mind may soar Above the wheeling poles , and at heaven's door Look in and see each blissful Deity , How he before the thunderous throne doth lie , & c . But whatever ...
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Términos y frases comunes
admirable agni Andrew Marvell asserted atque bishop bosom cause censure Charles CHARLES SYMMONS church Church of England composition Comus consequence critic Cromwell Damon death Defence Deodati discovered divine domino jam domum impasti edition England English enim etiam fame fancy father favour genius hæc hand hath honour Il Penseroso immediately ipse Isaac Vossius jam non vacat JOHN MILTON King Latin Lauder learned letter liberty literary Long Parliament Lycidas malè ment merit mihi Milton mind Morus Muse neque nihil nunc object occasion opinion panegyric Paradise Lost Parliament passage perhaps poem poet poetic poetry possessed praise prelate present quæ quam quid quis quod quoque racter reader regard remark respect Salmasius says seems sibi Smectymnuus sonnet speak spirit tamen taste thing thou tibi tion translation truth verse virtue Warton writer