He alone is worthy of the appellation who either does great things, or teaches how they may be done, or describes them with a suitable majesty when they have been done; but those only are great things which tend to render life more happy, which increase the innocent enjoyments and comforts of existence, or which pave the way to a state of future bliss more permanent and more pure.


The Prose Works of John Milton (ed. 1838)


He alone is worthy of the appellation who either does great things, or teaches how they may be done, or describes them with a suitable majesty when...

He alone is worthy of the appellation who either does great things, or teaches how they may be done, or describes them with a suitable majesty when...

He alone is worthy of the appellation who either does great things, or teaches how they may be done, or describes them with a suitable majesty when...

He alone is worthy of the appellation who either does great things, or teaches how they may be done, or describes them with a suitable majesty when...