The Annotated Milton: Complete English Poems (173 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
6.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

1094
holding funereal ashes
Return to text.

1095
black burial sheet
Return to text.

1096
brook, stream
Return to text.

1097
meadows, glades
Return to text.

1098
their flocks
Return to text.

1099
what time = when, at the time when
Return to text.

1100
a brownish beetle known as a cockchafer or dorfly/dorhawk
Return to text.

1101
blows (strictly, “hums” or “buzzes”)
Return to text.

1102
summertime/ hot-weather heat
Return to text.

1103
fattening? feeding? watering?
Return to text.

1104
Hesperus (Venus)
Return to text.

1105
“wheel” because heavenly objects were thought to be located in “spheres”
Return to text.

1106
tuned, in harmony with
Return to text.

1107
oat stems/straws
Return to text.

1108
woodland gods/demons, part human, part beast
Return to text.

1109
a tutor at Cambridge?
Return to text.

1110
straggling
Return to text.

1111
poems, songs
Return to text.

1112
plant-disease of an ulcerous sort
Return to text.

1113
worm or crawling larva, an intestinal parasite thought to infect sheep, cattle, etc.
Return to text.

1114
recently weaned
Return to text.

1115
blossoms
Return to text.

1116
slopes, hills, mountains, cliffs, etc.
Return to text.

1117
Celtic minstrel-poets
Return to text.

1118
the island of Anglesey, in the Irish Sea
Return to text.

1119
the River Dee
Return to text.

1120
magic
Return to text.

1121
Calliope [four syllables, second and fourth accented]
Return to text.

1122
i.e., she who bore Orpheus
Return to text.

1123
was mother to
Return to text.

1124
(1) performing magic, (2) entrancing, charming
Return to text.

1125
all of
Return to text.

1126
mob, throng, crowd, rabble, etc., all female, though it is unclear whether they were (1) Thracian women jealous of Eurydice or (2) Maenads angry that Orpheus did not properly honor their god, Dionysus
Return to text.

1127
his head had been cut off; in some versions of the story, the severed head continued to sing
Return to text.

1128
profits, avails
Return to text.

1129
simple, plain
Return to text.

1130
frolic
Return to text.

1131
generic shepherdess name
Return to text.

1132
see footnote 20, immediately above
Return to text.

1133
positive, determined, unobstructed, pure
Return to text.

1134
stimulate, incite
Return to text.

1135
reward
Return to text.

1136
find it
Return to text.

1137
Atropus (“irresistible”)
Return to text.

1138
Phoebus Apollo, god of poetry
Return to text.

1139
glittering
Return to text.

1140
metal hammered into very thin sheets and used to set off some gem or glittering stone
Return to text.

1141
talk
Return to text.

1142
ultimately
Return to text.

1143
recompense, reward
Return to text.

1144
the nymph Arethusa fled from a sea god, Alpheus; Diana turned her into a fountain, but he—a river—flowed under the sea and was thus united with her
Return to text.

1145
river, stream
Return to text.

1146
river running through Mantua, home of Virgil
Return to text.

1147
pastoral song
Return to text.

1148
Triton, a merman, son of Poseidon and Amphitrite, a Nereid
Return to text.

1149
cruel, terrible, wicked
Return to text.

1150
rough, stormy, strong
Return to text.

1151
winds represented as great birds
Return to text.

1152
pointed, hooked
Return to text.

1153
god of the winds [four syllables, second and fourth accented]
Return to text.

1154
water nymph [trisyllabic, first and third accented]
Return to text.

1155
during, subject to
Return to text.

1156
“Eclipses are misfortunes….
Funk & Wagnalls Standard Dictionary of Folklore, Mythology, and Legend,
ed. Maria Leach (New York: Harper, 1972),
p. 337
Return to text.

1157
secret, foul, evil
Return to text.

1158
River Cam, which flows through Cambridge (and from which, of course, the town takes its name)
Return to text.

1159
cap
Return to text.

1160
made of reedlike plants
Return to text.

1161
worked
Return to text.

1162
the hyacinth
Return to text.

1163
robbed
Return to text.

1164
child
Return to text.

1165
St. Peter, wearing a bishop’s miter (headdress) and carrying the keys to Heaven’s gates
Return to text.

1166
violently
Return to text.

1167
enough
Return to text.

1168
invited
Return to text.

1169
the prosody is helped if “they are” is contracted: did Milton perhaps intend it to be sounded as spoken?
Return to text.

1170
successful, prosperous
Return to text.

1171
like
Return to text.

1172
trifling, showy
Return to text.

1173
feeble
Return to text.

1174
corrupt, foul, festering, virulent
Return to text.

1175
vapor
Return to text.

1176
breathe
Return to text.

1177
plague, pestilence, moral corruption
Return to text.

1178
savage, cruel
Return to text.

1179
secret
Return to text.

1180
at a rapid pace, swiftly, right away
Return to text.

1181
as Roy Flannagan has said, “perhaps the most famous crux in English literature”
Return to text.

1182
see note 33 to line 85, above
Return to text.

1183
revered, authoritative
Return to text.

1184
uncertain: perhaps Theocritus, pastoral poet, who may have been born in Sicily
Return to text.

1185
valleys
Return to text.

1186
as in “bluebells,”“harebells,” etc.
Return to text.

1187
small flowers
Return to text.

1188
are customary
Return to text.

1189
playful, sportive
Return to text.

1190
new, green
Return to text.

1191
a hollow among hills
Return to text.

1192
the Dog Star, Sirius
Return to text.

1193
frugally, abstemiously
Return to text.

1194
clever, lovely, dainty
Return to text.

1195
the colored center of flowers
Return to text.

1196
spring, springlike
Return to text.

1197
early
Return to text.

1198
flecked
Return to text.

1199
sober, steadfast, constant, mournful
Return to text.

1200
crowned with laurel
Return to text.

1201
wood frame to hold flowers; funeral carriage
Return to text.

1202
introduce, put forward
Return to text.

1203
islands off the Scottish coast
Return to text.

1204
engulfing, submerging
Return to text.

1205
the sea was thought to be full of monsters
Return to text.

1206
tear-strewn
Return to text.

1207
i.e., we pray for you to be returned, but our prayers (“vows”) are denied
Return to text.

1208
the Roman name for Land’s End, in Cornwall; perhaps a reference to some Cornish giant—or perhaps (since Milton first wrote and then crossed out “Corineus”) inserted strictly for prosodic reasons
Return to text.

1209
Mount St. Michael’s, near Land’s End in Cornwall, and across the English Channel from Mont-St.-Michel, in France
Return to text.

1210
in Spain
Return to text.

1211
a fortress (“hold”) near Cape Finisterre, in Spain
Return to text.

1212
pity, compassion
Return to text.

1213
carry, transport
Return to text.

1214
i.e., the sun
Return to text.

1215
soon, in a little while
Return to text.

1216
to restore, renew, mend
Return to text.

1217
dresses
Return to text.

1218
precious metal, here clearly “gold”
Return to text.

1219
muddy, damp
Return to text.

1220
bathes, washes
Return to text.

1221
inexpressible
Return to text.

1222
grand, sacred, formal
Return to text.

1223
companies, groups, bands
Return to text.

1224
fellowships
Return to text.

1225
go
Return to text.

1226
guardian spirit
Return to text.

1227
ample
Return to text.

1228
reparation, compensation
Return to text.

1229
unpolished, rough
Return to text.

1230
streams
Return to text.

1231
reeds, pipes, flutes
Return to text.

Other books

The Third God by Pinto, Ricardo
Can't Let Go by Jessica Lemmon
Being a Girl by Chloë Thurlow
The Stones of Florence by Mary McCarthy
The Pain Nurse by Jon Talton
The Clue of the Broken Blade by Franklin W. Dixon
Jesus by James Martin
I'll Take a Chance by Annalisa Nicole