Paradise Lost, Book 4 |
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Page iii
... . MACMILLAN , B.A. , ΟΧΟΝ . , PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH LITERATURE , ELPHINSTONE COLLEGE , BOMBAY . Condon : MACMILLAN AND CO . , AND NEW YORK . All rights reserved 14486.33.65 HARVARD COLLEGE JUN 30 1925 LIBRARY IN MEMORY OF 1895 .
... . MACMILLAN , B.A. , ΟΧΟΝ . , PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH LITERATURE , ELPHINSTONE COLLEGE , BOMBAY . Condon : MACMILLAN AND CO . , AND NEW YORK . All rights reserved 14486.33.65 HARVARD COLLEGE JUN 30 1925 LIBRARY IN MEMORY OF 1895 .
Page xi
... English poet did not altogether disdain to borrow from the work of this rather obscure Italian playwright . Besides a general resemblance between the principal incidents and the characters represented , there are some traces of ...
... English poet did not altogether disdain to borrow from the work of this rather obscure Italian playwright . Besides a general resemblance between the principal incidents and the characters represented , there are some traces of ...
Page xiii
... he employs . Among the English writers whom Milton is supposed to have imitated , the first in order of time and im- portance is Caedmon . This Anglo - Saxon poet composed , in the seventh century , a poem in which is INTRODUCTION . xiii.
... he employs . Among the English writers whom Milton is supposed to have imitated , the first in order of time and im- portance is Caedmon . This Anglo - Saxon poet composed , in the seventh century , a poem in which is INTRODUCTION . xiii.
Page xiv
... English Literature , and he will see reason to believe that Milton owes much to his Anglo - Saxon predecessor . In fact , the two poets , though born in distant ages and at very different stages of civilization , are not entirely unlike ...
... English Literature , and he will see reason to believe that Milton owes much to his Anglo - Saxon predecessor . In fact , the two poets , though born in distant ages and at very different stages of civilization , are not entirely unlike ...
Page xvii
... English poet chiefly attracted Milton's admiration and gave the spur to his imaginative genius , we are least likely to err if we give credence to his own statement as reported by Dryden , to whom he declared that Spenser was his ...
... English poet chiefly attracted Milton's admiration and gave the spur to his imaginative genius , we are least likely to err if we give credence to his own statement as reported by Dryden , to whom he declared that Spenser was his ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adam and Eve adjective adverb Aeneid amphibrach anapaest apposition Asmodeus beauty bower bright called character Cherub clause Compare 11 death DEIGHTON delight derived described Devil Diodorus Siculus earth English evil express F. J. ROWE fair fall fallen angels Fiend flowers fruit Gabriel garden Garden of Eden gate genius glory God's Greek happy hast hath Heaven Hell Homer hope Iapetus intransitive Italian Keightley king Latin means MICHAEL MACMILLAN Milton Milton's poetry mind misery monosyllable Mozambic natural night noun object pain Paradise Lost Paradise Regained pare participle passage poet poetical polyptoton previous line Prime Orb Puritan regarded round sapphire Satan scale seems sense sewed shade shows sleep son of Noah spear speech spirit stood suggests sweet syllables taste Tennyson thee thou thought throne thyself transitive verb Tree of Knowledge Uriel verb verse Vondel's W. T. WEBB word write