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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Page 29
... King Ahab and from your hands also, O vindictive Sidonian woman.190 In this way Cilician Paul was driven out of the Emathian city with his flesh bleeding from the hissing scourge;” and the ungrateful citizenry of fishy Gergessa” bade ...
... King Ahab and from your hands also, O vindictive Sidonian woman.190 In this way Cilician Paul was driven out of the Emathian city with his flesh bleeding from the hissing scourge;” and the ungrateful citizenry of fishy Gergessa” bade ...
Page 115
... king by a philosopher who was on the way to his death because the ruler had unwittingly condemned him—unrecognized and innocent— when he happened to be seized among some robbers. O King, if you make an end of me, an observer of the laws ...
... king by a philosopher who was on the way to his death because the ruler had unwittingly condemned him—unrecognized and innocent— when he happened to be seized among some robbers. O King, if you make an end of me, an observer of the laws ...
Page 116
... King's friends at Cambridge. Few of the poems in the volume are worth reading for their own sake or for any possible ... King than is implied in Milton's pastoral allegory of their six years together at Christ's College. It is enough for ...
... King's friends at Cambridge. Few of the poems in the volume are worth reading for their own sake or for any possible ... King than is implied in Milton's pastoral allegory of their six years together at Christ's College. It is enough for ...
Page 143
... King Kenelm by a dove, reporting it to the pope in a note consisting of two lines of poetry, which Milton translated:) Low in a mead of Kine under a Thorn, Of head bereft li'th poor Kenelm King-born. SONNET XI ON THE DETRACTION WHICH ...
... King Kenelm by a dove, reporting it to the pope in a note consisting of two lines of poetry, which Milton translated:) Low in a mead of Kine under a Thorn, Of head bereft li'th poor Kenelm King-born. SONNET XI ON THE DETRACTION WHICH ...
Page 221
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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