John Milton — "Enjoy your dear wit and gay rhetoric, That hath so well been taught her dazzling…"
Enjoy your dear wit and gay rhetoric, That hath so well been taught her dazzling fence.
Enjoy your dear wit and gay rhetoric, That hath so well been taught her dazzling fence.
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"Solitude sometimes is best society."
"There is no truth sure enough to justify persecution."
"For books are not absolutely dead things, but do contain a potency of life in them to be as active as that soul was whose progeny they are; nay, they do preserve as in a vial the purest efficacy and e…"
"Or let my lamp at midnight hour Be seen in some high lonely tower, Where I may oft outwatch the Bear, With thrice-great Hermes, or unsphere The spirit of Plato to unfold What worlds or what vast regio…"
"Henceforth I learn, that to obey is best, and love with awe the invisible King."
English poet whose Paradise Lost (1667) is the canonical English epic, written while blind during the Restoration after his service to Cromwell's Commonwealth. Closely associated with Andrew Marvell (Commonwealth poet and friend who protected Milton at the Restoration). For an intellectual contrast, see King Charles II's Restoration court, the courtly, sexually-libertine, theater-reopened world of 1660s London — Milton wrote Paradise Lost as a defeated Republican; the Restoration culture around him celebrated everything his Commonwealth had banned. The cleanest 'losing side writes the masterpiece' moment in English literature — Paradise Lost's Satan is freighted with the political defeat of the regicides Milton served.
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