Complete poetical works of John Milton.
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Other Authors: | |
Format: | Book |
Language: | English Latin Ancient Greek Italian |
Published: |
Boston,
Houghton Mifflin
[1965]
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Edition: | [Cambridge edition]. |
Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- A paraphrase on Psalm 114
- Psalm 136
- Carmina elegiaca (elegiac verses)
- [Asclepiads]
- Apologus de rustico et hero (a fable of a peasant and his landlord)
- Philosophus ad regem (a philosopher to a king)
- Elegia prima (elegy I: to Charles Diodati)
- Elegia secunda (elegy II: on the death of the beadle of Cambridge University)
- Elegia tertia (elegy III: on the death of the bishop of Winchester)
- In obitum praesulis Eliensis (on the death of the bishop of Ely)
- In obitum procancellarii medici (on the death of the vice-chancellor, a physician)
- The fifth ode of Horace, lib. I
- In proditionem (on the gunpowder plot)
- In eandem (on the same)
- In eandem (on the same)
- In eandem (on the same)
- In inventorem bombardae (on the inventor of gunpowder)
- Elegia quarta (elegy IV: to Thomas Young)
- Elegia septima (elegy VII)
- On the death of a fair infant dying of a cough
- Naturam non pati senium (that nature does not suffer from old age)
- At a vacation exercise in the college
- De idea Platonica quemadmodum Aristoteles intellexit (on the Platonic idea as Aristotle understood it)
- Elegia quinta (elegy V: on the coming of spring)
- Song: on May morning
- On the morning of Christ's nativity
- Elegia sexta (elegy VI: to Charles Diodati visiting in the country)
- The passion
- Sonnet I ("o nightingale")
- Sonnet II (donna leggiadra: "beautiful lady")
- Sonnet III (qual in colle aspro: "as on a rough hillside")
- Canzone
- Sonnet IV (Diodati—e te'l dirò: "Diodati—and I tell you")
- Sonnet V (per certo i bei vostr'occhi: "surely your beautiful eyes")
- Sonnet VI (giovane piano, e semplicetto amante: "young, gentle, simple-hearted lover")
- On Shakespeare
- [Epilogue to the elegies]
- On the university carrier
- Another on the same
- An epitaph on the marchioness of Winchester
- L'allegro
- Il penseroso
- Ad patrem (to his father)
- Arcades
- Sonnet VII ("how soon hath time")
- On time
- Upon the circumcision
- At a solemn music
- A mask (Comus)
- Psalm 114
- Lycidas
- Ad Salsillum poetam Romanum aegrotantem (to Salzilli, the Roman poet, when he was ill)
- Mansus (Manso)
- Ad Leonoram Romae canentem (to Leonora singing at Rome)
- Ad eandem (to the same)
- Ad eandem (to the same)
- Epitaphium Damonis (elegy for Damon)
- Dante, Inferno, xix.115-17.
- Petrarch, Sonnet cviii
- Ariosto, Orlando Furioso, xxxiv.79
- A saying of Tiberius
- Horace, Satires, I.i.24-26, I.x.14-15
- Sophocles, Electra, 624-35
- Sonnet VIII ("captain or colonel")
- Sonnet IX ("lady that in the prime")
- Sonnet X (to the lady Margaret Ley)
- Euripides, Suppliants, 438-41
- Horace, Epistles, I.xvi.40-45
- In effigiei eius sculptorem (on the engraver of his portrait)
- Sonnet XI ("a book was writ of late")
- Sonnet XII (on the same)
- Sonnet XIII (to my friend Mr. Henry Lawes)
- On the new forcers of conscience under the Long Parliament
- Sonnet XIV (on the religious memory of Mrs. Catharine Thomason)
- Ad Joannem Rousium Oxoniensis Academiae Bibliothecarium (to John Rous, Librarian of the University of Oxford)
- [Translations from The History of Britain]
- Psalm LXXX
- Psalm LXXXI
- Psalm LXXXII
- Psalm LXXXIII
- Psalm LXXXIV
- Psalm LXXXV
- Psalm LXXXVI
- Psalm LXXXVII
- Psalm LXXXVIII
- Sonnet XV (on the lord general Fairfax at the siege of Colchester)
- Seneca, Hercules Furens, 922-24
- [In Salmasii Hundredam] (against the Hundred of Salmasius)
- Sonnet XIX ("when I consider how my light is spent")
- Sonnet XVI (to the lord general Cromwell)
- Sonnet XVII (to sir Henry Vane the younger)
- Psalm I
- Psalm II
- Psalm III
- Psalm IV
- Psalm V
- Psalm VI
- Palm VII
- Psalm VIII
- [In Salmasium] (against Salmasius)
- Sonnet XXII ("Cyriack, this three years' day these eyes")
- Sonnet XVIII (on the late massacre in Piedmont)
- Sonnet XX ("Lawrence, of virtuous father virtuous son")
- Sonnet XXI ("Cyriack, whose grandsire on the royal bench")
- Sonnet XXIII ("methought I saw my late espousèd saint")
- Paradise lost
- Paradise regained
- Samson agonistes.