Lives of the English Sacred Poets, Volumen 2Parker, 1839 - 376 páginas |
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... seem all to termi- nate before that magnificent structure which Milton conse- erated to poetry and religion . The history of our verse during the greater portion of the seventeenth century , may be regarded as an elaborate preface to ...
... seem all to termi- nate before that magnificent structure which Milton conse- erated to poetry and religion . The history of our verse during the greater portion of the seventeenth century , may be regarded as an elaborate preface to ...
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... seems to have been confined to the Master , for he subsequently acknowledged with " all- grateful mind that more than ordinary favour and respect ” which he experienced above any of his equals , “ at the hands of those courteous and ...
... seems to have been confined to the Master , for he subsequently acknowledged with " all- grateful mind that more than ordinary favour and respect ” which he experienced above any of his equals , “ at the hands of those courteous and ...
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... seems to have been deaf to their music , and the only notice of their existence has been found in the MS . paper of Archbishop Sancroft , who transcribed the Ode on the Nativity , and the version of the 53rd Psalm . The first poetical ...
... seems to have been deaf to their music , and the only notice of their existence has been found in the MS . paper of Archbishop Sancroft , who transcribed the Ode on the Nativity , and the version of the 53rd Psalm . The first poetical ...
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... seems to have preserved the benignity of his spirit unruffled . Even the patient charity of Hall rose up against the unjust accusations of Milton , who inveighed against the gluttony of one whose almost ascetic sobriety was universally ...
... seems to have preserved the benignity of his spirit unruffled . Even the patient charity of Hall rose up against the unjust accusations of Milton , who inveighed against the gluttony of one whose almost ascetic sobriety was universally ...
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Robert Aris Willmott. " 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 circle of her musing hath liberty to propose to herself , though of highest hope ...
Robert Aris Willmott. " 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 circle of her musing hath liberty to propose to herself , though of highest hope ...
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admiration affecting affectionate appeared beautiful Bishop Bishop of Bath blank verse Bodham character charm cheerful Christian church colours Cowper death delight divine Dryden Eartham Edition elegance English expression fancy father favour feelings garden genius Gentleman's Magazine grace happy Hayley heart heaven Heber Herbert Croft Hodnet Homer honour Hymn Iliad Jeremy Taylor JOHN MILTON Johnson Joseph Warton labours Lady Austen Lady Hesketh Latin learned letter light lively Lord manner melancholy Milton mind morning nature never Night Thoughts Nogays numbers o'er observed Olney Paradise Lost passage piety pleasure poem poet poet's poetical poetry Pope praise prayer religion religious remark sacred satire says scene seems sermon Smectymnuus song sorrow soul Southey spirit sublime sweet tenderness thee thou tion translation truth Unwin verse versification village Vincent Bourne virtues walk Watts Weston writer Young