The Complete Poems and Major ProseHackett Publishing, 2003 M07 1 - 1088 pages First published by Odyssey Press in 1957, this classic edition provides Milton's poetry and major prose works, richly annotated, in a sturdy and affordable clothbound volume. |
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Results 1-5 of 48
Page x
... Aristotle) Elegia Septima (Elegy VII) The Passion On Shakespeare On the University Carrier Another on the Same An Epitaph on the Marchioness of Winchester L'Allegro Il Penseroso Sonnet VII: How Soon Hath Time . . . Arcades On Time Upon ...
... Aristotle) Elegia Septima (Elegy VII) The Passion On Shakespeare On the University Carrier Another on the Same An Epitaph on the Marchioness of Winchester L'Allegro Il Penseroso Sonnet VII: How Soon Hath Time . . . Arcades On Time Upon ...
Page 26
... Aristotle, who was the tutor and life-long friend of Alexander the Great. 26. Chaonia is Epirus, where Alexander's mother Olympias was born. For his divine father see Pl IX, 508, n. 27. Phoenix, son of Amyntor, was one of Achilles ...
... Aristotle, who was the tutor and life-long friend of Alexander the Great. 26. Chaonia is Epirus, where Alexander's mother Olympias was born. For his divine father see Pl IX, 508, n. 27. Phoenix, son of Amyntor, was one of Achilles ...
Page 31
... Aristotle's categories. 66. Because scholastić logic described Substance as unknowable except through its “accidents,” Milton pretends that a fairy godmother gave it the gift of invisibility in its cradle. 69. Sibyl here is simply an ...
... Aristotle's categories. 66. Because scholastić logic described Substance as unknowable except through its “accidents,” Milton pretends that a fairy godmother gave it the gift of invisibility in its cradle. 69. Sibyl here is simply an ...
Page 56
... ARISTOTLE) This is a college exercise—dating somewhere between 1628 and 1630, and resembling the second Prolusion in its ironical treatment of Aristotle, “the envious and perpetual calumniator of Pythagoras and Plato.” In form, the poem ...
... ARISTOTLE) This is a college exercise—dating somewhere between 1628 and 1630, and resembling the second Prolusion in its ironical treatment of Aristotle, “the envious and perpetual calumniator of Pythagoras and Plato.” In form, the poem ...
Page 65
... Aristotle affirmed (De Coelo I, ix), and it became an axiom of the schools. “Time is made by Motion, all confesse,” says John Davies of Hereford in Mirum in Modum (London, 1602; G4r). 22. heaviness: “the dumpish heavinesse, that ...
... Aristotle affirmed (De Coelo I, ix), and it became an axiom of the schools. “Time is made by Motion, all confesse,” says John Davies of Hereford in Mirum in Modum (London, 1602; G4r). 22. heaviness: “the dumpish heavinesse, that ...
Contents
3 | |
173 | |
Paradise Regained | 471 |
Samson Agonistes | 531 |
Prose | 595 |
Appendix | 1021 |
Index of Names | 1045 |
BACK COVER | 1060 |
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Common terms and phrases
Adam Aeneid ancient angels Areopagitica Aristotle Beast behold bishops Book called Chorus Christ Christian church Comus dark death delight divine doctrine doth E. M. W. Tillyard Earth Euripides evil eyes faith Father fear fire glory God's goddess gods grace Greek hand happy hast hath heart Heav'n heavenly Hell Hesiod holy honor human John John Milton Jove King Latin meaning learned less light live Lord Lycidas marriage Milton mind Muses nature night Ovid Ovid's Paradise Lost Paradise Regained peace perhaps Philistines Plato poem poet praise prelates Psalm Roman Samson Agonistes Satan says Serpent song SONNET soul spake spirit stars stood story sweet thee things thir thou thought Throne tion tradition translation Tree truth verse VIII virtue wings wisdom words Zeus