The Annotated Milton: Complete English Poems (168 page)

Read The Annotated Milton: Complete English Poems Online

Authors: John Milton,Burton Raffel

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Literary Collections, #Poetry, #Classics, #English; Irish; Scottish; Welsh, #English poetry

BOOK: The Annotated Milton: Complete English Poems
3.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

383
a candle—but Death extinguishes a person’s light
Return to text.

384
remained?
Return to text.

385
decompose, die
Return to text.

386
the indestructible stuff of which stars and other heavenly bodies are formed
Return to text.

387
just as the stars revolve, so too did Hobson, back and forth, back and forth, back and forth….
Return to text.

388
stopped
Return to text.

389
measures, assigns values to
Return to text.

390
any mechanical contrivance/machine
Return to text.

391
primary cause, which was movement
Return to text.

392
at once—but also “straight” in the sense of no longer revolving
Return to text.

393
one sense of the word “breathe,” as in “to take breath,” is “to rest”
Return to text.

394
“term” = when college is in session, “vacation” = when college is not in session
Return to text.

395
“drive the time away” as in “killing time”—but he was literally a “driver” (coachman)
Return to text.

396
(1) brought to life, (2) made to go faster
Return to text.

397
“fetch and carry” = common phraseology
Return to text.

398
abolished, done away with—but also “put down” in the ground, buried
Return to text.

399
i.e., six men will be required/used to carry him to his grave
Return to text.

400
boredom, sorrow
Return to text.

401
involving unconcern with time
Return to text.

402
load = burden
Return to text.

403
so that
Return to text.

404
as if
Return to text.

405
a form of torture
Return to text.

406
transformed, like so many classical figures, into a star/constellation?
Return to text.

407
the “date” of a document is the “time” assigned to it (by the calendar)
Return to text.

408
i.e., as regular as the moon
Return to text.

409
“wain” = wagon; “wane” = decrease
Return to text.

410
written on his tomb, or as his funereal inscription generally, just as letters too have their “superscriptions,” or inside addresses
Return to text.

411
hold/enclose the corpse of
Return to text.

412
dead in childbirth, together with her child, in 1631, at age twenty-three
Return to text.

413
Thomas, Viscount of Rock-Savage
Return to text.

414
on her mother’s side, heir of Lord Darcy, Earl of Rivers
Return to text.

415
counted, reckoned up
Return to text.

416
dwell
Return to text.

417
proper, fit
Return to text.

418
Hymen
Return to text.

419
she had been married at sixteen; at twenty-three she died
Return to text.

420
cypress = a funereal wood, its branches and twigs a symbol of mourning
Return to text.

421
born in 1629
Return to text.

422
goddess of childbirth
Return to text.

423
childbirth labor
Return to text.

424
one of the three Fates, who cut the thread of life
Return to text.

425
the child was dead before delivery
Return to text.

426
a cutting from a plant/flower
Return to text.

427
retinue?
Return to text.

428
careless
Return to text.

429
youth, rustic, lover
Return to text.

430
pluck, cut
Return to text.

431
springtime, like springtime
Return to text.

432
predictive, warning
Return to text.

433
the mountain where the Muses dwelled
Return to text.

434
twigs/sprays used as wreaths
Return to text.

435
roads
Return to text.

436
the River Cam, for which Cambridge is named
Return to text.

437
Rachel
Return to text.

438
the child she bore was Benjamin
Return to text.

439
happiness (in heaven)
Return to text.

440
(in Italian) lively, cheerful, gay, merry
Return to text.

441
monstrous dog, guardian of the entrance to Hades
Return to text.

442
Styx = underground river across which Charon ferried the souls of the dead into Hades
Return to text.

443
unknown
Return to text.

444
small, solitary chamber
Return to text.

445
projecting cliff edges
Return to text.

446
according to Homer, a people who live at the outer edge of the world and thus are in perpetual darkness
Return to text.

447
named, called
Return to text.

448
the three Graces are Agalia, Thalia, and Euphrosyne [four syllables, the second and fourth accented]
Return to text.

449
exhales
Return to text.

450
jolly, lively, unresisting
Return to text.

451
merry, gay
Return to text.

452
affable, graceful
Return to text.

453
fanciful turns of speech, conceits
Return to text.

454
sportive/cunning/amorous tricks
Return to text.

455
nod of the head, signaling either assent or command
Return to text.

456
goddess of youth [bisyllabic]
Return to text.

457
frolic, diversion
Return to text.

458
uncensured
Return to text.

459
slow, listless
Return to text.

460
speckled
Return to text.

461
“rear” as in “rear guard”: the image is military
Return to text.

462
as in “haystack”
Return to text.

463
brave, fierce, vigorous
Return to text.

464
“struts his dames before” = struts in front of his lady folk
Return to text.

465
light gray
Return to text.

466
in plain view, openly
Return to text.

467
elevated, distinguished, of high rank
Return to text.

468
display of high dignity/rank/wealth
Return to text.

469
elaborate costumes/uniforms
Return to text.

470
equipped, ordered
Return to text.

471
sharpens
Return to text.

472
appraises
Return to text.

473
reddish brown
Return to text.

474
farmland ploughed and harrowed but left uncultivated for a period (usually a year)
Return to text.

475
spotted, variegated
Return to text.

476
indented parapets at the tops of walls
Return to text.

477
i.e., some beautiful woman
Return to text.

478
dwells
Return to text.

479
center of attraction
Return to text.

480
Corydon and Thyrsis = prototypical names for characters in Greek pastorals
Return to text.

481
leafy edible plants
Return to text.

482
food
Return to text.

483
deft, dexterous
Return to text.

484
prepares
Return to text.

485
abode, cottage
Return to text.

486
tie up
Return to text.

487
bundles made after reaping (usually of grains)
Return to text.

488
i.e., before harvest time (autumn)
Return to text.

489
conduct, guide, show the way
Return to text.

490
browned by exposure
Return to text.

491
conical heaps of hay, in the fields/pastures
Return to text.

492
meadow
Return to text.

493
free from care/doubt/worry
Return to text.

494
highland
Return to text.

495
small villages or groups of houses, having no church
Return to text.

496
merry, joyful, light-hearted
Return to text.

497
primitive three-stringed fiddle
Return to text.

498
a principal fairy
Return to text.

499
cakes, sweetmeats, dainties
Return to text.

500
threshing tool: a wooden handle to which is tied a free-swinging clublike swingle (or “swipple”)
Return to text.

501
grain
Return to text.

502
beneficent goblin
Return to text.

503
stuffed with food
Return to text.

504
morning call
Return to text.

505
garments
Return to text.

506
public spectacle/festivity
Return to text.

507
sufficient/abundant supply
Return to text.

508
god of marriage
Return to text.

509
orange-red/yellow
Return to text.

510
wax candle
Return to text.

511
splendor, magnificence
Return to text.

512
Ben Jonson, 1572–1637, poet, dramatist, critic; friend/colleague of Shakespeare
Return to text.

513
comedy (in which the actors wore low-heeled slippers, or “socks”)
Return to text.

514
imagination
Return to text.

515
corrosive
Return to text.

516
the Lydian (ancient Greek) mode (musical scale) was soft, often melancholy; air = melodies
Return to text.

517
gentle
Return to text.

518
round
Return to text.

519
see footnote 36 to line 27, above
Return to text.

Other books

Horseman of the Shadows by Bradford Scott
Project Genesis by Michelle Howard
The Strategist by John Hardy Bell
Facing the World by Grace Thompson
Voices on the Wind by Evelyn Anthony
Management Skills by January Rowe
The Forgotten by Marly Mathews
in2 by Unknown