The Life of John MiltonOxford University Press, 1983 - 278 стор. The author in this new biography of Milton sees the man whole, and in doing so enhances our understanding not only of his character but also of his poetry. |
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Сторінка 22
... interest can always be found by lively minds , however , even in academic exercises . One of the tasks usually assigned to undergraduates in their second year was rendering Plato into Latin . First you had to go through it all with a ...
... interest can always be found by lively minds , however , even in academic exercises . One of the tasks usually assigned to undergraduates in their second year was rendering Plato into Latin . First you had to go through it all with a ...
Сторінка 38
... interest had already shifted . He was no longer writing poems about deceased prelates ; and he had not yet turned his satirical attention to the question of whether prelates were or were not a desirable thing . He was looking rather ...
... interest had already shifted . He was no longer writing poems about deceased prelates ; and he had not yet turned his satirical attention to the question of whether prelates were or were not a desirable thing . He was looking rather ...
Сторінка 133
... interest in divorce ; indeed , it is so obvious that such a connection exists that it is hardly worth mentioning . But , although he writes from the heart , he is not merely writing about himself . It is very conspicuous , for instance ...
... interest in divorce ; indeed , it is so obvious that such a connection exists that it is hardly worth mentioning . But , although he writes from the heart , he is not merely writing about himself . It is very conspicuous , for instance ...
Зміст
Prologue I | 1 |
The Pigeon of Pauls | 5 |
The Courtier | 38 |
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Загальні терміни та фрази
Areopagitica believe bishops blind boys Bread Street Bunhill Fields C. V. Wedgwood called Cambridge Cambridge Platonists century certainly Chalfont St Giles Charles Christ Christian Church Comus Countess of Derby course Cromwell Cromwell's Darbishire death Defensio Secunda delight Diodati divine divorce doctrine doubtless Earl Edward Phillips England English epic evidence eyes father felt Forest Hill friends Greek hath Ibid imagine Italian Italy John Milton King knew Lady Latin Lawes learning liberty live London look Lord Lycidas Manso marriage married Mary masque mind nation never Old Cause Oxford pamphlets papist Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parliament parliamentary perhaps poem poet poetry political Powell Presbyterian probably prose Protestant Reformation religious royalist Samson Agonistes Scriptures seems Shakespeare sight sonnet Spenser St Paul's suggested thee things Thomas Young thou thought verse virtue wife writing written wrote Yale