The Age of Milton, Volume 5 |
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Page 49
... Thee I revisit now with bolder wing , Escaped the Stygian pool , though long detained In that obscure sojourn , while in my flight Through utter and through middle darkness borne . ' At the opening of the Seventh Book comes another auto ...
... Thee I revisit now with bolder wing , Escaped the Stygian pool , though long detained In that obscure sojourn , while in my flight Through utter and through middle darkness borne . ' At the opening of the Seventh Book comes another auto ...
Page 50
... thee implores : For thou art heavenly , she an empty dream . ' But as this passage is the first definite and unmistakable reference to the Restoration that occurs in the poem , it seems not improbable that Milton had completed the first ...
... thee implores : For thou art heavenly , she an empty dream . ' But as this passage is the first definite and unmistakable reference to the Restoration that occurs in the poem , it seems not improbable that Milton had completed the first ...
Page 61
... thee at least Divided empire with Heaven's King I hold ; By thee , and more than half perhaps will reign ; As Man ere long and this new world shall know . ' Then from the vast circuit of infinity , of boundless Chaos below , and the ...
... thee at least Divided empire with Heaven's King I hold ; By thee , and more than half perhaps will reign ; As Man ere long and this new world shall know . ' Then from the vast circuit of infinity , of boundless Chaos below , and the ...
Page 85
... thee . Near . Speech hath left him . Bass . He hath shook hands with time ; his funeral urn Shall be my charge : remove the bloodless body . The coronation must require attendance : That past , my few days can be but one mourning ...
... thee . Near . Speech hath left him . Bass . He hath shook hands with time ; his funeral urn Shall be my charge : remove the bloodless body . The coronation must require attendance : That past , my few days can be but one mourning ...
Page 99
... thee from heaven , where thou wert reared . ' The joys of earth and air are thine entire , That with thy feet and wings dost hop and fly , And , when thy poppy works , thou dost retire To thy carved acorn bed to lie . ' Up with the day ...
... thee from heaven , where thou wert reared . ' The joys of earth and air are thine entire , That with thy feet and wings dost hop and fly , And , when thy poppy works , thou dost retire To thy carved acorn bed to lie . ' Up with the day ...
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