Milton's Blindness, Volume 69Columbia University Press, 1934 - 167 páginas |
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Página 44
... believe there is , in this sense at least he might have been a product of his time . I have heard it said that one can prove anything by the Bible . I am beginning to believe that this is also true of Milton's writings , when I survey ...
... believe there is , in this sense at least he might have been a product of his time . I have heard it said that one can prove anything by the Bible . I am beginning to believe that this is also true of Milton's writings , when I survey ...
Página 61
... believe , to the passage as a whole . Let us turn next to a discussion of the autobiographical passage alone . Of this passage Charles D. Yonge writes , " In the third book of Paradise Lost , Milton speaks with a manly resignation ...
... believe , to the passage as a whole . Let us turn next to a discussion of the autobiographical passage alone . Of this passage Charles D. Yonge writes , " In the third book of Paradise Lost , Milton speaks with a manly resignation ...
Página 88
... believe they may — are short - lived and transitory and are in no sense typical of the wonted fortitude of the poet . Nothing is more difficult or more dangerous to those blinded in adult life than the resulting inactivity . We have no ...
... believe they may — are short - lived and transitory and are in no sense typical of the wonted fortitude of the poet . Nothing is more difficult or more dangerous to those blinded in adult life than the resulting inactivity . We have no ...
Conteúdo
Medicine and Hygiene in the Seventeenth Century | 3 |
Evidence Relating to the Cause of Miltons Blindness | 16 |
Fantastic Views of the Cause of Miltons Blindness | 24 |
Direitos autorais | |
20 outras seções não mostradas
Termos e frases comuns
affliction amanuensis Andrew Marvell appear Arnold Sorsby autographs believe that Milton blind person Booth Tarkington calamity cause of Milton's certainly color conclude condition congenital syphilis considered dark David Masson death Deborah Denis Saurat dictation disease edited Edward Philips enemies English evidence experience fact feel friends glaucoma gout Heaven Hirschberg Ibid idea John Milton Julius Hirschberg less letter to Philaras lived London loss of sight lost his sight Manuscript Letter Medicine Milton's blindness Milton's daughters Milton's loss mind Mutschmann myopia myopia and detachment nature ophthalmologists opinion optic Paradise Lost Perhaps period physician poem poet Poetical poetry Professor Saurat proof Psalm quote reference retina Salmasius Samson Agonistes says scholars Second Defence seems seventeenth century sightless signature Sir Arthur Pearson Smectymnuus sonnet statement suffered theory things thou thought tion totally blind vision writing wrote York