The Life of Milton |
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Página ix
... the visionaries of public virtue have seldom succeeded in the management of
dominion , and in politics it has long been a prevailing creed to believe , that
goverment is like gold , and must not be falhioned for extensive use without the
alloy ...
... the visionaries of public virtue have seldom succeeded in the management of
dominion , and in politics it has long been a prevailing creed to believe , that
goverment is like gold , and must not be falhioned for extensive use without the
alloy ...
Página 102
tish critic of great eminence , Lord Monboddo , has celebrated the opening of the
Iconoclastes as a model of English prose , or , to use his own just expressions , "
a specimen of noble • and manly eloquence . " Johnson , from the same work ...
tish critic of great eminence , Lord Monboddo , has celebrated the opening of the
Iconoclastes as a model of English prose , or , to use his own just expressions , "
a specimen of noble • and manly eloquence . " Johnson , from the same work ...
Página 110
Let us however remark , for the interest of literature , that the two combatants
were both to blame in their reciprocal use of weapons utterly unworthy of the
great cause that each had to sustain ; not content to wield the broad and bright
sword of ...
Let us however remark , for the interest of literature , that the two combatants
were both to blame in their reciprocal use of weapons utterly unworthy of the
great cause that each had to sustain ; not content to wield the broad and bright
sword of ...
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Términos y frases comunes
accompliſhed Adam Adamo admiration affection againſt allowed alſo appears biographer celebrated character compoſition concerning conſidered critic death delight eloquent engaged England Engliſh equal expreſſion eyes failed fancy father favour firſt genius give heart heav'n himſelf honour hope human idea intereſting Italian Italy Johnſon juſt juſtice language Latin learned leſs letters liberal liberty literary living Loſt manner mihi Milton mind moral moſt muſt nature never obſerve occaſion Paradiſe particularly perhaps period perſon poem poet poetical poetry political powers praiſe probably produced prove publiſhed quaker reader reaſon received regard relates remark ſame ſays SCENE ſeems ſeverity ſhall ſhould ſome ſpeak ſpirit ſtill ſtudy ſubject ſuch ſuffered theſe thoſe thou thought tion truth uſe various verſes virtue whoſe writer written