The Poems of John MiltonLongmans, 1968 - 1181 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 78
Page 232
... King's Cambridge acquaintances appeared in 1638 , of which the first part is entitled Justa Eduardo King naufrago , ab Amicis moeren- tibus amoris & μveías xápiv ( Obsequies for Edward King , lost at sea , writ- ten by his sorrowful ...
... King's Cambridge acquaintances appeared in 1638 , of which the first part is entitled Justa Eduardo King naufrago , ab Amicis moeren- tibus amoris & μveías xápiv ( Obsequies for Edward King , lost at sea , writ- ten by his sorrowful ...
Page 234
... King is only the nominal ' subject ' of Lycidas : fundamentally the poem concerns M. himself . Mindful of the similarity between King's career and his own , he writes in fear of premature death . The ' real subject ' is the resolving of ...
... King is only the nominal ' subject ' of Lycidas : fundamentally the poem concerns M. himself . Mindful of the similarity between King's career and his own , he writes in fear of premature death . The ' real subject ' is the resolving of ...
Page 490
... king , Ahaz his sottish conqueror , whom he drew God's altar to disparage and displace For one of Syrian mode , whereon to burn 475 His odious offerings , and adore the gods Whom he had vanquished . After these appeared A crew who under ...
... king , Ahaz his sottish conqueror , whom he drew God's altar to disparage and displace For one of Syrian mode , whereon to burn 475 His odious offerings , and adore the gods Whom he had vanquished . After these appeared A crew who under ...
Contents
A Paraphrase of Psalm cxiv Eliensis On the Death | 27 |
Elegia tertia In Obitum | 49 |
Mansus Manso Bibliothecarium To John | 59 |
Copyright | |
21 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Adam Aeschylus Amor angels Apollo Atque Boeotia Bridg bright called canzone chariot Christ comma Comus dark Date daughter death devils divine doctrina doth Du Bartas earth Echoes Elegia Euripides eyes fair father flower goddess gods golden grace Greek hand hast hath head headnote heaven heavenly hell Hesiod Homer honour Horace Il Penseroso inserted ipse Italian Jove king L'Allegro Lady Latin light lines live Lord Lycidas means Midsummer Night's Dream mihi Milton moon mortal Muses night nymphs Odes Ovid Paradise Lost passage pastoral perhaps Petrarch Phineas Fletcher Phoebus poem poet poetry Polyolbion printed quid refers rhyme sacred Samson Sanchuniathon Satan sense Shakespeare shepherd sing song Sonnet soul Spenser spirit stars suggests sweet tells text followed thee Theocritus Theog thou throne tibi tree Trin variants Venus verse viii Virgil winds word Yale