Considerations on Milton's Early Reading: And the Prima Stamina of His Paradise Lost; Together with Extracts from a Poet of the Sixteenth Century. In a Letter to William Falconer, M.D. from Charles Dunster, M.A.John Nichols, Red-Lion passage, Fleet-Street, London; and sold by R. H. Evans, (successor to Mr. Edwards,); Robson; Nicol; Payne; also by Bull, Meyler, and Bally, Bath; Deighton, Cambridge; Cooke, Oxford; Archer, Dublin; and Layng, Edinburgh, 1800 - 249 Seiten |
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Seite 10
... doth with thy English now were his . " So well in that are his inventions wrought , As bis will now be the tranflation thought ; Thine the original ; and France shall boast No more the maiden glories fhe has loft . , B. JONSON . Ben ...
... doth with thy English now were his . " So well in that are his inventions wrought , As bis will now be the tranflation thought ; Thine the original ; and France shall boast No more the maiden glories fhe has loft . , B. JONSON . Ben ...
Seite 20
... doth feal it , never to RECOIL . II . The bigh buge - bellied mountains- ] P. 337- I always thought huge - bellied a fingu- lar epithet for the young poet to apply to mountains ; and I have not been with- out expectations of finding an ...
... doth feal it , never to RECOIL . II . The bigh buge - bellied mountains- ] P. 337- I always thought huge - bellied a fingu- lar epithet for the young poet to apply to mountains ; and I have not been with- out expectations of finding an ...
Seite 22
... doth fall ; Or from the climate of the northern blast Unto that place where fummer AY DOTH LAST . p . 695 Ay , for ever , is not often to be found in Milton's other poems ; at least not in his later ones . But I conceive that he had at ...
... doth fall ; Or from the climate of the northern blast Unto that place where fummer AY DOTH LAST . p . 695 Ay , for ever , is not often to be found in Milton's other poems ; at least not in his later ones . But I conceive that he had at ...
Seite 23
... Doth with his weight the under cloud opprefs ; And so one humour doth another CRUSH , " Till to the ground their liquid pearls do GUSH . € 4 P. 30 , Gufp Gub indeed is fcriptural . In the Pfal- mift's reference ( 23 )
... Doth with his weight the under cloud opprefs ; And so one humour doth another CRUSH , " Till to the ground their liquid pearls do GUSH . € 4 P. 30 , Gufp Gub indeed is fcriptural . In the Pfal- mift's reference ( 23 )
Seite 24
... doth GUSH ; P. 368 . but he had alfo , in other places , shewed his young reader the fine poetical and expreffive effect of the word gush , in de- fcribing the impetuous flowing of water . He thus powerfully defcribes the fnow melting ...
... doth GUSH ; P. 368 . but he had alfo , in other places , shewed his young reader the fine poetical and expreffive effect of the word gush , in de- fcribing the impetuous flowing of water . He thus powerfully defcribes the fnow melting ...
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Againſt alfo alſo anon Bartas's bleft bright CIMMERIAN clouds courſe Dæmons darkneſs death defcribed defcription divine doth dread Du Bartas's earth edition erft eternal Ev'n ev'ry expreffion eyes facred faid fair fame fecond feen fenfe fhall fhew fhine fhould fide fifters filver fimilarly fince fing firft firſt folio fome fometimes fong foul fpirit fpring ftars ftill fubjects fuch fuppofed fweet glorious God's grace hath Heaven himſelf hoft houſe Humfrey Lownes inftance itſelf JOSHUA SYLVESTER juft King laft light light'ning Lord Milton moft moſt mufe mufic muſt night obferve paffage paffing paffion PARADISE LOST Peter Short pleaſure poefy poem poet poetical poetry praiſe prefent Prince proud purfled refpecting reft Scythia ſhall ſhe ſtate ſweet Sylvefter Sylvefter's Du Bartas thee thefe theſe thine thofe thoſe thou thouſand tion tranflation URANIA uſed vefter's verfe verſe voice Warton Weft whofe whoſe wings
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 233 - God, rarely bestowed, but yet to some (though most abuse) in every nation; and are of power, beside the office of a pulpit, to imbreed and cherish in a great people the seeds of virtue and public civility, to allay the perturbations of the mind, and set the affections in right tune; to celebrate in glorious and lofty hymns the throne and equipage of God's almightiness...
Seite 232 - But those frequent songs throughout the law and prophets beyond all these, not in their divine argument alone, but in the very critical art of composition, may be easily made appear over all the kinds of lyric poesy to be incomparable.
Seite 232 - Time serves not now, and perhaps I might seem too profuse to give any certain account of what the mind at home, in the spacious circuits of her musing, hath liberty to propose to herself, though of highest hope and hardest attempting; whether that epic form whereof the two poems of Homer and those other two of Virgil and Tasso are a diffuse, and the book of Job a brief model...
Seite 60 - Haste thee, Nymph, and bring with thee Jest, and youthful Jollity, Quips and cranks, and wanton wiles, Nods and becks, and wreathed smiles, Such as hang on Hebe's cheek, And love to live in dimple sleek ; Sport that wrinkled Care derides, And Laughter holding both his sides.
Seite 162 - ... parley ended, our ambitious Grandam, Who onely yet did heart and eye abandon, Against the Lord, now farther doth proceed, And hand and mouth makes guilty of the deed. A novice Thief (that in a Closet spies A heap of Gold, that on the Table lies) Pale, fearfull shivering, twice or thrice extends, 340 And twice or thrice retires his fingers...
Seite 215 - Cowley found himself to be a poet, or, as he himself tells us, ' was made one,' by the delight he took in Spenser's Fairy Queen, ' which was wont to lay in his mother's apartment ;' and which he had read all over, before he was twelve years old. That Dryden was, in some degree, similarly indebted to Cowley, we may collect from his denominating him ' the darling of my youth, the famous Cowley.
Seite 119 - Before all Time, all Matter, Form, and Place, God all in all, and all in God it was : Immutable, immortall, infinite, Incomprehensible, all spirit, all light, All Majestie...
Seite 11 - nothing can be further from my intention than to insinuate that Milton was a plagiarist or servile imitator; but I conceive that, having read these sacred poems of very high merit, at the immediate age when his own mind was just beginning to teem with poetry, he retained numberless thoughts, passages, and expressions therein, so deeply in his mind, that they hung inherently on his imagination, and became as it were naturalized there. Hence many of them were afterwards insensibly transfused into...
Seite 127 - Not that they have the bridle on their neck, To run at random without curb or check, T abuse the Earth, and all the World to blinde. And tyrannize o're body and o're minde. God holds them chain'd in Fetters of his Power ; That, without leave, one minute of an houre They cannot range. It was by his permission, The Lying Spirit train'd...