Book/Printed Material Paradise lost, books I. and II.
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Image 1 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. PR 3560 PA LOST MILTON
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 2 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, COPYRIGHT OFFICE. No registration of title of this book as a preliminary to copyright protec- tion has been found. Forwarded to Order Division (Date) (6, i, 1906—2,000. Jll» Glass...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 3 of Paradise lost, books I. and II.
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 4 of Paradise lost, books I. and II.
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 5 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. PARADISE LOST BOOKS I. and IL BY JOHN MILTON. With Introduction and Notes. EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY B( STON New York Chicago San Francisco
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 6 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. LIBRARY of CONGRESS Two Copies Received APR 5 1906 Copyright Entry CLASS XXC No. COPY B. 3JS Copyrighted By EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY 1906 Received from Copyright Office. 7*Je 07
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 7 of Paradise lost, books I. and II.
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 8 of Paradise lost, books I. and II.
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 9 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. INTRODUCTION. Milton, the author of Paradise Lost, was born in London, England, on the 9th of December, 1608. His education was carried on at home by various masters, and by his father,...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 10 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. il INTRODUCTION. year, he entered Christ s College, Cambridge, and remained there until he was twenty-three. Here came a break in his education, and with it the question, What was he going...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 11 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. INTRODUCTION. Ill of classical and Italian literature, storing his mind with all that was best worth appropriating, and be- coming almost as familiar with Latin, Greek, and Italian as with his native...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 12 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. IV INTRODUCTION. being appointed, in 1649, Latin Secretary to the Committee of Foreign Affairs, a post for which his knowledge of foreign languages specially qualified h m. It was during his tenure...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 13 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. INTRODUCTION. V seems never to falter in his entire devotion to that which he believes he ought to do at any particular juncture. Two striking instances of this are, the return from...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 14 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. VI INTRODUCTION. Chronological Table. Continued. Bunyan bora 1628 Laud, Bp. of London, 1628 Dryden born 1631 Milton leaves Cam- bridge and retires to Horton 1632 L? Allegro, II Penseroso, LyciJas, etc. I...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 15 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. INTRODUCTION. The subject of Paradise Lost as given in Book I. is the temptation and fall of man, that is, his dete- rioration from the state of perfect goodness and happiness, in...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 16 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. VI INTRODUCTION. (A) The Fall: why and how it was b?-onght about: (i) Heaven the War {a) Its Cause, the refusal of Satan and his followers to acknowledge the Son as their...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 17 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. INTRODUCTION. Vll Him. In nature the grosser feeds the purer, the soil is transformed, through the plant, into flower and fruit the latter, used as man s nourishment, is sublimed into the...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 18 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. Vlll INTRODUCTION. (2) Satan traverses Chaos, and explores the World, finds Eden, and plots the Fall. II.-IV. (3) Raphael now visits Adam and Eve. He describes their position in the universe, and...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 19 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. INTRODUCTK )N. IX I. At the earliest period referred to by Raphael, Space consists of two parts, Heaven or the Empy- rean, and Chaos 1 as yet this World was not, nor...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 20 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. X INTRODUCTION. He cautions us that his language is merely sym- bolical. The Almighty, Himself invisible, has His throne on a central mount, clouded in dazzling brightness, where He receives the adoration...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 21 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. INTRODUCTION. XI Space remotest from Heaven, in the bottomless pit, and is partitioned off from Chaos by walls and roof of fire. Its shape is not described, but the roof is said...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 22 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. Xll INTRODUCTION. Space (as suggested in diagram 3), and what its relative size, cannot be determined. 1 Man is thus in a middle position, the Good above, the Evil below, and he...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 23 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. INTRODUCTION. Xlll these spheres only two are material the Primum Mobile or hard, external casing, and the next within it, the Crystalline Sphere, which consists of a clear, watery fluid. The first...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 24 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. XIV INTRODUCTION. which occupy a fixed position with regard to one another, and it is therefore called the Fixed or the Firmament it revolves once daily, carrying all its stars round with...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 25 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. PARADISE LOST. BOCK I.
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 26 of Paradise lost, books I. and II.
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 27 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. PARADISE LOST. The Printer to the Reader. Courteous Reader, there was no Argument at first intended to the book; but for the satisfaction of many that have desired it, I have procured...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 28 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. The Argument. The first Book proposes, first in brief, the whole subject; Man s disobedience, and the loss thereupon of Paradise where- in he was placed then touches the prime cause of...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 29 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. PARADISE LOST. BOOK I. The subject of the poem, Maris fall. Invocation of the Holy Spirit s aid. Of man s first disobedience, and the fruit Of that forbidden tree, whose mortal...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 30 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. 6 PARADISE LOST. In the beginning how the Heavens and Earth Rose out of Chaos or, if Sion hill IO Delight thee more, and Siloa s brook that flow d Fast by...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 31 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. PARADISE LOST. 7 Man s fall caused by Satan in revenge for his expulsion from I/eai en. Say first for Heaven hides nothing from thy view, Nor the deep tract of hell...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 32 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. 8 PARADISE LOST. With hideous ruin and combustion, down To bottomless perdition, there to dwell In adamantine chains and penal fire, Who durst defy the Omnipotent to arms. Satan, recovering from his...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 33 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. PARADISE LOST. 9 As one great furnace flamed yet from those flames No light but rather darkness visible Served only to discover sights of woe, Regions of sorrow, doleful shades, where peace...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 34 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. IO PARADISE LOST. With floods and whirlwinds of tempestuous fire, He soon discerns and, weltering by his side, One next himself in power, and next in crime, Long after known in Palestine,...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 35 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. PARADISE LOST. I I Not what the potent Victor in his rage 9s Can else inflict, do I repent, or change, Though changed in outward lustre, that fixed mind, And high disdain...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 36 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. 12 PARADISE LOST. That were an ignominy and shame beneath 5 This downfall since, by fate, the strength of gods, And this empyreal substance, cannot fail Since, through experience of this great...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 37 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. PARADISE LOST. 1 3 Under thy conduct, and, in dreadful deeds x 3° Fearless, endangered Heaven s perpetual King, And put to proof his high supremacy, Whether upheld by strength, or chance,...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 38 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. 14 PARADISE LOST. Strength undiminished, or eternal being To undergo eternal punishment? J 55 Whereto with speedy words the Arch-Fiend replied Satan s r joinder Revenge is sweet we can live to...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 39 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. i8o PARADISE LOST. Winged with red lightning and impetuous rage, Perhaps hath spent his shafts, and ceases now To bellow through the vast and boundless Deep. Let us not slip the occasion,...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906
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Image 40 of Paradise lost, books I. and II. i6 PARADISE LOST. Lay floating many a rood, in bulk as huge As whom the fables name of monstrous size, Titanian or Earth-born, that warred on Jove, Briareos or Typhon, whom the...
- Contributor: Milton, John
- Date: 1906