Portrait of John Milton

John Milton

Paradise Lost

Early Modern influential 133 sayings

Sayings by John Milton

What though the field be lost? All is not lost; the unconquerable will, and study of revenge, immortal hate, and courage never to submit or yield: and what is else not to be overcome?

1667 — Paradise Lost
General Unverifiable

No light, but rather darkness visible.

1667 — Paradise Lost
General Unverifiable

And in the lowest deep a lower deep still threatening to devour me opens wide, to which the hell I suffer seems a heaven.

1667 — Paradise Lost
Religious Unverifiable

Abashed the Devil stood, and felt how awful goodness is, and saw Virtue in her shape how lovely, saw and pined his loss.

1667 — Paradise Lost
General Unverifiable

Such as the world has known, in all her pomp, her pride, and her oppression.

1667 — Paradise Lost
Political Unverifiable

Yet not to earth are those bright luminaries lent for show, but to dispense their good.

1667 — Paradise Lost
General Unverifiable

Solitude sometimes is best society.

1667 — Paradise Lost
General Unverifiable

And the fair Sex, whose chief delight is to be thought of, and who, for that reason, love to live in the midst of a crowd, and to be admired by all, cannot but be displeased at a solitude, which deprives them of all these pleasures.

1643 — The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce
General Unverifiable

For God, when he gave the command to multiply, did not mean that it should be a perpetual or a forced generation, but a free and voluntary one.

1643 — The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce
General Unverifiable

Marriage is a covenant, not a sacrament.

1643 — The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce
General Unverifiable

He who would be a great man, must be a great judge.

1654 — Second Defence of the English People
General Unverifiable

The greatest part of men are but a rude multitude, and have no more sense of things than children.

1651 — A Defence of the People of England
General Unverifiable

For what is liberty without wisdom, and without virtue? It is the greatest of all evils; for it is folly, vice, and madness, without tuition or restraint.

1651 — A Defence of the People of England
General Unverifiable

To be more than man, is not to be man.

1667 — Paradise Lost
General Unverifiable

Evil into the mind of God or man may come and go, so unapproved, and leave no spot or blame behind.

1667 — Paradise Lost
Religious Unverifiable

The world was all before them, where to choose their place of rest, and providence their guide.

1667 — Paradise Lost
General Unverifiable

God doth not need either man's work or his own gifts; who best bear his mild yoke, they serve him best.

1655 — When I Consider How My Light Is Spent
Religious Unverifiable

Yet, when I consider that I am not to satisfy the vulgar, but those who are knowing, and lovers of truth, I am encouraged to proceed.

1642 — The Reason of Church-Government Urged Against Prelaty
General Unverifiable

For what is a city but men? And what is a man, if he be not a rational creature?

1651 — A Defence of the People of England
General Unverifiable

I am not about to write a romance, but a serious history.

1670 — The History of Britain
General Unverifiable
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