Milton on Himself: Milton's Utterances Upon Himself and His WorksOxford University Press, 1939 - 307 pagina's |
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Pagina xxix
... tell everything of himself , I hold to be impossible . Who could endure to own the doing of a mean thing ? Who is there that has done none ? But this I protest : - that nothing that I say shall be untrue . I will set down naught in ...
... tell everything of himself , I hold to be impossible . Who could endure to own the doing of a mean thing ? Who is there that has done none ? But this I protest : - that nothing that I say shall be untrue . I will set down naught in ...
Pagina 37
... tell my secret - and do thou make answer for me : my lady saith - and her words are my law - that this is the language Love boasteth as his own ! 12. Sonnet IV . 1630 ? From the Italian . Diodati - 5 and I tell thee in amazement at ...
... tell my secret - and do thou make answer for me : my lady saith - and her words are my law - that this is the language Love boasteth as his own ! 12. Sonnet IV . 1630 ? From the Italian . Diodati - 5 and I tell thee in amazement at ...
Pagina 82
... tell ye the very clothes I wear , though he be much mistaken in my wardrobe . And like a son of Belial without the hire of Jezebel charges me ' of blaspheming God and the King , ' as ordinarily as he imagines me ' to drink sack and ...
... tell ye the very clothes I wear , though he be much mistaken in my wardrobe . And like a son of Belial without the hire of Jezebel charges me ' of blaspheming God and the King , ' as ordinarily as he imagines me ' to drink sack and ...
Inhoudsopgave
A PLAN OF LIFE | 3 |
16081654 | 14 |
PERSONAL APPEARANCE | 28 |
Copyright | |
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Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
adversary Alexander answer Apology for Smectymnuus Areopagitica blindness called cause Christian church commonwealth Commonwealth of England confess confuter Council deeds Diodati divine doctrine Early Lives Eikon Basilike Eikonoklastes Elegy enemy England English eyes faith fame Familiar Letter favour friends glory Greek hath Heaven Henry Oldenburg honour hope Italian Italy John Milton judgement King labour Latin learned leisure less liberty Liljegren literary Lycidas Manso Martin Bucer Masson matter mind Muses never noble opinion oration pamphlets Paradise Lost Parliament Parliament of England passage perhaps person Peter Du Moulin poem poet praise Prolusion prose readers reason religion Salmasius Samson Agonistes Scripture Second Defence extract song Sonnet speak spirit tell thee things Thomas Young thou thought Tillyard tion tongue truth virtue wherein wish witness wont words writing written youth