The Influence of Milton on English Poetry, Volume 1 |
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... THOMAS WARTON COWPER WORDSWORTH KEATS · B. POEMS IN NON - MILTONIC BLANK VERSE , 1667-1750 C. LOCO - DESCRIPTIVE POEMS NOT KNOWN TO BE MILTONIC . a . HILL - POEMS b . OTHER POEMS D. RIMED TECHNICAL TREATISES BIBLIOGRAPHIES 573 573 583 ...
... THOMAS WARTON COWPER WORDSWORTH KEATS · B. POEMS IN NON - MILTONIC BLANK VERSE , 1667-1750 C. LOCO - DESCRIPTIVE POEMS NOT KNOWN TO BE MILTONIC . a . HILL - POEMS b . OTHER POEMS D. RIMED TECHNICAL TREATISES BIBLIOGRAPHIES 573 573 583 ...
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... Thomas à Becket or of St. James of Compostella in earlier times , closely associated with the life and thought of the day and thronged with persons of all classes , each bearing his gift . In the twentieth century there are few even of ...
... Thomas à Becket or of St. James of Compostella in earlier times , closely associated with the life and thought of the day and thronged with persons of all classes , each bearing his gift . In the twentieth century there are few even of ...
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... Thomas Whincop's Scanderbeg ( 1747 ) , where Paradise Lost is called " the finest Piece in the English Language " ( noted by Good , pp . 127–8 ) ; Catharine Macaulay's Modest Plea for Copy Right ( 1774 , p . 23 ) , where it is described ...
... Thomas Whincop's Scanderbeg ( 1747 ) , where Paradise Lost is called " the finest Piece in the English Language " ( noted by Good , pp . 127–8 ) ; Catharine Macaulay's Modest Plea for Copy Right ( 1774 , p . 23 ) , where it is described ...
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... Thomas Stratford used almost the same words — probably referring to these lines — in the preface to his First Book of Fontenoy ( 1784 ?, see Mo. Rev. , lxxi . 95 ) . Sneyd Davies wrote in 1740 ( Rhapsody to Milton , in Whaley's ...
... Thomas Stratford used almost the same words — probably referring to these lines — in the preface to his First Book of Fontenoy ( 1784 ?, see Mo. Rev. , lxxi . 95 ) . Sneyd Davies wrote in 1740 ( Rhapsody to Milton , in Whaley's ...
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... Thomas Newcomb said almost the same thing in the second stanza of his On Milton's Paradice Lost ( Miscellaneous Poems , 1740 , p . 17 ) . xviii . 328 ( 1764 ) . • William Massey , Remarks upon P. L. ( 1761 ) , p . iv . Explanatory Notes ...
... Thomas Newcomb said almost the same thing in the second stanza of his On Milton's Paradice Lost ( Miscellaneous Poems , 1740 , p . 17 ) . xviii . 328 ( 1764 ) . • William Massey , Remarks upon P. L. ( 1761 ) , p . iv . Explanatory Notes ...
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adjectives admired Aeneid Allegro ANON appeared bard beauty blank verse borrowings Coleridge Comus couplet Cowper Crit Critical death Della Cruscans descriptive edition eighteenth century Elizabethan English Poets epic Essay expression Gray Grongar Hill heaven heroic heroic couplet Hill Homer Hymn Hyperion Iliad imitation influence inversions James John Joseph Warton Keats language later Latin letter lines Lycidas lyric meter Milton Miltonic blank verse minor poems Miscellany Monody Muse nature Night Thoughts o'er octosyllabics Odyssey Oxford P. L. ii P. L. vii Paradise Lost passages Penseroso phrases pieces Poetical poetry Pope Pope's popular praise preface prose prosody published quatorzains quoted readers references rime Satan Seasons seems seen song sonnets Southey Spenser stanza sweet thee things Thomas Thomas Warton Thomson thou tion translation unrimed viii Virgil Warton William words Wordsworth writers written wrote