Milton, Man and Thinker |
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Page xv
... nature . His high opinion of himself is also a high opinion of man . In the divorce pamphlets as well as in the letter on edu- 1 Records of Shelley , Byron , and the Author ( London , 1878 ) , p . 215 . cation , in politics as well as ...
... nature . His high opinion of himself is also a high opinion of man . In the divorce pamphlets as well as in the letter on edu- 1 Records of Shelley , Byron , and the Author ( London , 1878 ) , p . 215 . cation , in politics as well as ...
Page xvi
... nature is good and great , and , in essence , divine . Hence the necessity of liberty for man . But this pride is implanted in an intelligent and sensitive na- ture , which sees failure clearly and suffers deeply from it . 2 Cf. Masson ...
... nature is good and great , and , in essence , divine . Hence the necessity of liberty for man . But this pride is implanted in an intelligent and sensitive na- ture , which sees failure clearly and suffers deeply from it . 2 Cf. Masson ...
Page 2
... natural and almost inevitable . A man of strict and austere life , living in a Puritan age and siding with Puritanism in almost all the questions at issue between it and contending tendencies , can hardly be taken for anything but a ...
... natural and almost inevitable . A man of strict and austere life , living in a Puritan age and siding with Puritanism in almost all the questions at issue between it and contending tendencies , can hardly be taken for anything but a ...
Page 2
... natural and almost inevitable . A man of strict and austere life , living in a Puritan age and siding with Puritanism in almost all the questions at issue be- tween it and contending tendencies , can hardly be taken for anything but a ...
... natural and almost inevitable . A man of strict and austere life , living in a Puritan age and siding with Puritanism in almost all the questions at issue be- tween it and contending tendencies , can hardly be taken for anything but a ...
Page 5
... natural thing . His greatness was taken for granted , first of all by himself . During the whole course of his life , he was to make candid and stu- pendous admissions concerning his own genius . He did not boast of it ; it was a natural ...
... natural thing . His greatness was taken for granted , first of all by himself . During the whole course of his life , he was to make candid and stu- pendous admissions concerning his own genius . He did not boast of it ; it was a natural ...
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Adam angels Areopagitica Augustine Azazel believe blind body Book of Enoch cause Chapter Christ Christian Church conception created creation creatures death destiny divine divorce doctrine dogma earth Eleazer of Worms elect Enoch eternal evil expression eyes fall Father feeling flesh Fludd give glory God's harmony hath Heaven Holy human Ibid important intellectual Irenæus JAMES HOLLY JAMES HOLLY HANFORD justice Kabbalah kabbalistic liberty light living man's mankind marriage matter Milton Milton's mind Milton's philosophy Milton's thought mortal Mortalists Mutschmann myth nature Neo-Platonism opinion original Overton pamphlet pantheism Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passage passion perhaps poem poet political pride Prose Puritan reason regeneration religion Robert Fludd S. B. LILJEGREN Samson Agonistes Satan Scripture seems sensuality Serpent Smectymnuus soul spirit Tertullian thee theory things thou tion tradition Treatise triumph truth tyrant whole Wisdom woman Zohar