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Milton, John
- A seventeenth-century English poet. His greatest work is the epic Paradise Lost, which he dictated after he went blind. With Geoffrey Chaucer and William Shakespeare , Milton is considered one of the greatest of all English poets. A famous phrase from Milton's works is his statement of purpose in Paradise Lost: “ to justify the ways of God to men .” Also well known is the last line of his poem “On His Blindness”: “ They also serve who only stand and wait .”
Example Sentences
Thus, typical endorsements on the official documents might read, “John, Milton is a sadist” or “Have you seen Milton, John?”
The wisdom of John Milton, John Locke and John Stuart Mill—not to mention that of Americans like George Mason and Justice Louis Brandeis—is as true today as it was in their times.
No one claimed that the proposals marked an end to 300 years of press history – that John Milton, John Wilkes, John Stuart Mill and George Orwell were spinning in their respective graves.
The great names of John Milton, John Wilkes and George Orwell are being invoked as champions of free speech by rightwing newspapers which would happily have locked up all three, and probably campaigned to have Milton's head on London Bridge in 1660.
Milton, John, 62, 125, 136, 262, 307.
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