Complete Poetical WorksContains all of Milton's poetry, English, Latin, Greek, and Italian. |
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Page xxi
... followed ; how fully successful the renewed marriage was we do not know . At any rate Milton took into his house for about a year a troop of Powells , whose talkative presence was torture to a writer in need of quiet . Four children ...
... followed ; how fully successful the renewed marriage was we do not know . At any rate Milton took into his house for about a year a troop of Powells , whose talkative presence was torture to a writer in need of quiet . Four children ...
Page xxviii
... followed against the persuasions of Bembo , 3 to fix all the industry and art I could unite to the adorning of my native tongue ; not to make verbal curiosities the end ( that were a toilsome vanity ) , but to be an interpreter and ...
... followed against the persuasions of Bembo , 3 to fix all the industry and art I could unite to the adorning of my native tongue ; not to make verbal curiosities the end ( that were a toilsome vanity ) , but to be an interpreter and ...
Page 105
... followed it appear ( though some dates are uncertain ) to have been all more or less re- ligious . In a letter written early in 1633 to a friend ( perhaps his old tutor , Thomas Young ) , who had warned him against in- dulgence in study ...
... followed it appear ( though some dates are uncertain ) to have been all more or less re- ligious . In a letter written early in 1633 to a friend ( perhaps his old tutor , Thomas Young ) , who had warned him against in- dulgence in study ...
Contents
To Charles Diodati | 9 |
On the Death of the Beadle of Cambridge | 16 |
In obitum Procancellarii medici On the Death of the ViceChancellor | 24 |
Copyright | |
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Adam Adam and Eve amorous angels Areopagitica arms behold bliss bright cloud Comus dark death deep divine earth Elegy eternal Euripides evil Exod eyes fair faith father Faunus fear flow'rs fruit glory glossary God's goddess gods grace Greek hand hath heard heart heav'n heav'nly hell Hesiod hill honor Il Penseroso Iliad Jove king L'Allegro Latin light live Lord lost Lycidas Matt mihi Milton mind Muse night numina o'er Odysseus Ovid Paradise Paradise Lost Paradise Regained peace perhaps Philistines Phoebus poem poet praise reign sacred Samson Satan serpent shade shalt sight Smectymnuus song Sonnet soon soul spake Spenser Spirit stars stood sweet thee thence Theocritus things thou art thou hast thought throne thyself tibi traditional tree verse Virgil virtue winds wings words Zeus