Considerations On Milton's Early Reading, And the Prima Stamina of His Paradise Lost, Together With Extracts From a Poet of the Sixteenth Century. in a Letter to William Falconer, M.D. From Charles Dunster, M.a
Considerations On Milton's Early Reading, And the Prima Stamina of His Paradise Lost, Together With Extracts From a Poet of the Sixteenth Century. in a Letter to William Falconer, M.D. From Charles Dunster, M.a
Pre-1801 Imprint Collection (Library of Congress) Dlc [from Old Catalog]
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Come fnake-trefs'd fy ftcrs ! come ye difmal elves ! Ceafe now to curfc and cruciate yourfelves ! Come, leave the horror of your houlcs pale ! Come, hither bring your foul; black, baneful gall ! Let lack of work no more, from henceforth, fear you! Man by his fin a hundred Hells doth rear you. This eccho made whole Hell to tremble troubled 5 The drowfy night her deep dark horrors doubled. And J75 y , And fuddenly Avemus* gulph did fwim. r With roiio, pitch, and brimdone, to the brim ; W'hUe the ...fierce Gorgonsand the Sphinxes feU> Hydnw and Harpies, 'gan to yawn and ycU.— Now tlie three fillers, tlie three hideous Raget^ *Mid thoufand dorms rudi from th* infernal dagcsj Furious they rowl their adamantine .cars, 0*er th* ever*fhaking ninefold Jftcely bart Of th* Stygian bridge Having aftain*d to our calm hav*n of lights With fwifter courfe than Boreas* nimble flight. All fly dt man, all, with InvetVate flrifc. Who mod may torture his deteded life. Here firft comes Dbarth, the lively form of "I)eath, Still yawning wide, with loathfom dinking breath.
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