Milton and the Theme of FameMouton, 1973 - 71 páginas |
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Página 21
... learned from the printed and the spoken wisdom of the most learned men that nothing mean or mediocre is tolerable in an orator any more than it is in a poet , and that it behoves an aspirant to true , and not to merely specious ...
... learned from the printed and the spoken wisdom of the most learned men that nothing mean or mediocre is tolerable in an orator any more than it is in a poet , and that it behoves an aspirant to true , and not to merely specious ...
Página 25
... learned men , I shall sit with the ivy and laurel of a victor . I shall no longer mingle unknown with the dull rabble and my walk shall be far from the sight of profane eyes . 27 Milton acknowledges his present position in the field of ...
... learned men , I shall sit with the ivy and laurel of a victor . I shall no longer mingle unknown with the dull rabble and my walk shall be far from the sight of profane eyes . 27 Milton acknowledges his present position in the field of ...
Página 40
... learned men are there , throughout all France , who read , approve , embrace ? ... This , moreover , I can truly say ; at the time when our defence was first published and readers were all glowing with attention to it , there was not an ...
... learned men are there , throughout all France , who read , approve , embrace ? ... This , moreover , I can truly say ; at the time when our defence was first published and readers were all glowing with attention to it , there was not an ...
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Termos e frases comuns
achieved ambition applause Areopagitica Boethius Christ Church Government Consolation of Philosophy Dalila's David Daiches deeds Defensio Secunda desire for fame Diekhoff Diodati divorce pamphlet E. M. W. Tillyard earth earthly fame earthly to heavenly Eikonoklastes elegy English fame as rumor final fit audience further God's Grace hath heaven heavenly fame honor hope Ibid immortality indicates Infirmity of Noble John Milton King last infirmity learned lines On Shakespeare literary live Lycidas Milton entered Milton New York Milton published Milton says Milton wrote Milton's thought mind opinion pamphlet wars Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Patrem perhaps period of Milton's Plato poem poet poetic praise praise of learning Prolusion VII prose pure rabble Reason of Church renown Samson Agonistes Satan Second Defence second period Smectymnuus Sonnet VII spirit Tacitus Testimonia thee theme of fame things thinking thir Thomas Young thou Tillyard tongues true fame true glory truth verse wide audience writing