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" I now must change Those notes to tragic ; foul distrust, and breach Disloyal on the part of Man, revolt And disobedience : on the part of Heaven Now alienated, distance and distaste, Anger and just rebuke, and judgment given, That brought into this world... "
Paradise lost, a poem. With the life of the author [by E. Fenton]. - Page 187
by John Milton - 1800
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The Batsford Book of English Poetry: Chaucer to Arnold

Barbara Lloyd Evans - 1989 - 1238 pages
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Something Understood: Studies in Anglo-Dutch Literary Translation

Bart Westerweel, Theo dʼ Haen, Theo d'. Haen - 1990 - 352 pages
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English Poetry: A Poetic Record from Chaucer to Yeats

David Hopkins - 1990 - 296 pages
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Milton in Italy: Contexts, Images, Contradictions

Mario A. Di Cesare - 1991 - 632 pages
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The New Oxford Book of Seventeenth Century Verse

Alastair Fowler - 1991 - 888 pages
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From Stress to Stress: An Autobiography of English Prosody

Burton Raffel - 1992 - 216 pages
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From Stress to Stress: An Autobiography of English Prosody

Burton Raffel - 1992 - 218 pages
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Milton's Wisdom: Nature and Scripture in Paradise Lost

John Reichert - 1992 - 320 pages
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St Petersburg Dialogues: Or Conversations on the Temporal Government of ...

Joseph Marie comte de Maistre - 1993 - 458 pages
...your heart ... give place to the physician, for the Lord created him." (Ecclesiasticus 38:1-12) 28 No more of talk where God or angel guest With man, as with his friend, familiar used To sit indulgent, and with him partake Rural repast, permitting him the while Venial discourse...
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