John Milton — "Such as the dead are, and their memory; Such as the dead are, and their memory."
Such as the dead are, and their memory; Such as the dead are, and their memory.
Such as the dead are, and their memory; Such as the dead are, and their memory.
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"He who marries a wife, and knows not how to rule her, is like him who takes a wild beast into his house, and knows not how to tame it."
"No light, but rather darkness visible."
"Promiscuous reading is necessary to the constituting of human nature."
"When a man hath been labouring the hardest labour in the deep mines of knowledge, hath furnished out his mind through the whole cyclopædia, hath read the choicest authors, ancient and modern, cannot b…"
"Enjoy your dear wit and gay rhetoric, That hath so well been taught her dazzling fence."
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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