 | Duncan Wu - Poetry - 2003 - 316 pages
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 | John Milton - English literature - 2003 - 1012 pages
...extol Him first, him last, him midst, and without end. Fairest of stars, lasr in the train of night,0 If better thou belong not to the dawn, Sure pledge of day, that crown'st the smiling morn With thy bright circlet, praise him in thy sphere While day arises, that... | |
 | John Milton, Merritt Yerkes Hughes - Poetry - 2003 - 388 pages
...t'our intelli- Heaven in the Iliad XXII, 318. In the genee. pre-sunrise sky it is Lucifer, the lightIf better thou belong not to the dawn, Sure pledge of day, that crown'st the smiling Morn With thy bright Circlet, praise him in thy Sphere While day arises, that... | |
 | Poetry - 2004 - 692 pages
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 | Thomas Babington Macaulay - Philosophy - 2005 - 552 pages
...conviction that he was both a great and afgood man. DANTE (JANUARY 1824) v " Fairest of stars, last in the train of night, If better thou belong not to the dawn, Sure pledge of day, that crowtt'st the smiling morn With thy bright circlet."-1— MILTON. IN a review of Italian literature,... | |
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