The Spectator, Volume 2Dent, 1963 - 33 pagina's |
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Pagina 312
... Poets that ever wrote , in the Multitude and Variety of his Characters . Every God that is admitted into his Poem , acts a Part which would have been suitable to no other Deity . His Princes are as much distin- guished by their Manners ...
... Poets that ever wrote , in the Multitude and Variety of his Characters . Every God that is admitted into his Poem , acts a Part which would have been suitable to no other Deity . His Princes are as much distin- guished by their Manners ...
Pagina 313
... Poem was capable of receiving . The whole Species of Mankind was in two Persons at the Time to which the Subject of his Poem is confined . We have , however , four distinct Characters in these two Persons . We see Man and Woman in the ...
... Poem was capable of receiving . The whole Species of Mankind was in two Persons at the Time to which the Subject of his Poem is confined . We have , however , four distinct Characters in these two Persons . We see Man and Woman in the ...
Pagina 386
... Poem . Milton seems to have been sensible of this Imperfection in his Fable , and has therefore endeavoured to cure it by several Expedients ; particularly by the Mortification which the great adversary of Mankind meets with upon his ...
... Poem . Milton seems to have been sensible of this Imperfection in his Fable , and has therefore endeavoured to cure it by several Expedients ; particularly by the Mortification which the great adversary of Mankind meets with upon his ...
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