Search for crossword answers and clues
''Lycidas'' poet
Answer for the clue "''Lycidas'' poet ", 6 letters:
milton
Alternative clues for the word milton
Word definitions for milton in dictionaries
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 26062 Housing Units (2000): 9161 Land area (2000): 13.036941 sq. miles (33.765521 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.244890 sq. miles (0.634263 sq. km) Total area (2000): 13.281831 sq. miles (34.399784 sq. km) FIPS code: 41725 Located within: ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
redirect Milton, Massachusetts
Usage examples of milton.
They dismounted in order to revere it more at their ease, but the bust proved, by an irony bitterer than the sick, heart-breaking, brilliant Jew could have imagined in his cruelest moment, to be that of the German Milton, the respectable poet Klopstock, whom Heine abhorred and mocked so pitilessly.
Milton had been jetting around during the two weeks, checking on his Hercules franchises, but on the Friday preceding the appointment he flew back to New York.
Milton hoses from the sidewalk every morning includes the dead jellyfish of prophylactics and the occasional hermit crab of a lost high heel.
Milton grinned at her, perspiring in pinstripes, and once again the tragedy cuff link glinted in the sun.
That is the fellow who made the Index to my Ramblers, and set down the name of Milton thus: Milton, MR.
As he did, the riots, his frayed nerves, the smell of fire in the air, and the audacity of this man Morrison dodging sniper fire for a pack of cigarettes all became too much for Milton.
In addition to absconding with twenty-five thousand dollars and giving Milton false hopes of my return, Father Mike was abandoning his own family.
Yet this truly comic paper does not probably know that it is comic, any more than the kleptomaniac knows that he steals, or than John Milton knew he was a humorist when he wrote a hymn upon the circumcision, and spent his honeymoon in composing a treatise on divorce.
Milton had been third clarinet in the Southeastern High School orchestra.
Week after week, aided or coerced by their parents, they came, and week after week Milton Stephanides excused himself to go up to his bedroom and play his clarinet out the window.
Milton and Tessie drifted off to quiet parts of the house, and there, lifting her skirt a little, or removing a sock, or once, when nobody was home, pulling up her blouse to expose her lower back, Tessie allowed Milton to press his clarinet to her skin and fill her body with music.
A week after Tessie became engaged, on a steamy Tuesday morning, Milton put his clarinet away for good and went down to Cadillac Square to exchange his Boy Scout uniform for another.
In the long-haired war protesters Milton saw his own shaggy, condemnatory son.
In moralized bestiaries he is, of course, an allegory of the Devil, and is so used by Milton.
Cromwell, the oldest of the Bonapartes, when he achieved his Eighteenth Brumaire, encountered scarcely any other resistance than a few imprecations from Milton and from Ludlaw, and was able to say in his boorishly gigantic language, "I have put the King in my knapsack and the Parliament in my pocket.