The Minor Poems in EnglishMacmillan, 1972 - 362 էջ |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 22–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
Էջ 37
... Latin is soccus , as in Horace , Ars Poetica , 80 . hunc socci cepere pedem grandesque cothurni.2 Thus unnatural English is justified by being made the echo of accepted Latin usage . Such freaks of learning often lie buried beneath even ...
... Latin is soccus , as in Horace , Ars Poetica , 80 . hunc socci cepere pedem grandesque cothurni.2 Thus unnatural English is justified by being made the echo of accepted Latin usage . Such freaks of learning often lie buried beneath even ...
Էջ 57
... Latin is that ' Forget not ' , wrenched back to the very end of the first sentence . This anticipates the great opening sentence of Paradise Lost which gives a similar sense of titanic effort partly by placing the verb in its Latin ...
... Latin is that ' Forget not ' , wrenched back to the very end of the first sentence . This anticipates the great opening sentence of Paradise Lost which gives a similar sense of titanic effort partly by placing the verb in its Latin ...
Էջ 79
... Latin speech , printed as his sixth Prolusion , carried on this double vein . The nature of the occasion and his office for the day - an evidence of his growing popularity - prompted a genially urbane discourse ; the latter half of it ...
... Latin speech , printed as his sixth Prolusion , carried on this double vein . The nature of the occasion and his office for the day - an evidence of his growing popularity - prompted a genially urbane discourse ; the latter half of it ...
Բովանդակություն
Acknowledgements | 9 |
Introduction | 17 |
LAllegro | 143 |
Հեղինակային իրավունք | |
9 այլ բաժինները չեն ցուցադրվում
Common terms and phrases
ancient appear begin better bring Brother called Cambridge century chastity Christian classical Comus dance dark death divine doth early ears earth edition elegy Elizabethan English eyes fact fair followed give gods Greek hast hath head heav'n human Italy John Jonson King Lady language late Latin Lawes learned less light lines live London look Lost Lycidas masque means MICHIGAN Milton morn Nativity nature never night once pastoral peace perhaps phrase poem poet poetry praise present printed published Renaissance sense shepherds sing Smectymnuus song Sonnet soul sound Spenser sphere Spirit star Studies sweet thee things thou thought tradition translation true truth turn University verse Virgil virtue winds wood writing written young youth