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As that is of the water, watery; so this is of the earth, earthy. Both have that intenseness of feeling, which seems to resolve itself into the element which it contemplates.'

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This 'Spousal Verse' was written in honour of the
Ladies Elizabeth and Katherine Somerset. Although
beautiful, it is inferior to the Epithalamion' on
Spenser's own marriage,-omitted with great reluct-
ance as not in harmony with modern manners.
1. 2 feateously: elegantly.
1. 15 shend: put out. L. 39 a noble peer: Robert
Devereux, second Lord Essex, then at the height
of his brief triumph after taking Cadiz: hence the
allusion following to the Pillars of Hercules, placed
near Gades by ancient legend.

1. 11 Eliza: Elizabeth. L. 27 twins of Jove: the
stars Castor and Pollux: baldric, belt; the zodiac.
A fine example of a peculiar class of Poetry ;-
that written by thoughtful men who practised this
Art but little. Wotton's, LXXII, is another. Jeremy
Taylor, Bishop Berkeley, Dr. Johnson, Lord Macau-
lay, have left similar specimens.

Summary of Book Second

THIS division, embracing the latter eighty years of the seventeenth century, contains the close of our Early poetical style and the commencement of the Modern. In Dryden we see the first master of the new: in Milton, whose genius dominates here as Shakespeare's in the former book,-the crown and consummation of the early period. Their splendid Odes are far in advance of any prior attempts, Spenser's excepted: they exhibit the wider and grander range which years and experience and the struggles of the time conferred on Poetry. Our Muses now give expression to political feeling, to religious thought, to a high philosophic statesmanship in writers such as Marvell, Herbert, and Wotton: whilst in Marvell and Milton, again, we find the first noble attempts at pure description of nature, destined in our own ages to be continued and equalled. Meanwhile the poetry of simple passion, although before 1660 often deformed by verbal fancies and conceits of thought, and afterward by levity and an artificial tone,-produced in Herrick and Waller some charming pieces of more finished art than the Elizabethan: until in the courtly compliments of Sedley it seems to exhaust itself, and lie almost dormant for the hundred years between the days of Wither and Suckling and the days of Burns and Cowper.-That the change from our early style to the modern brought with it at first a loss of nature and simplicity is undeniable: yet the far bolder and wider scope which Poetry took between 1620 and 1700, and the successful efforts then made to gain greater clearness in expression, in their results have been no slight compensation.

PAGE NO. 43 LXII

46

47

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1. 8 whist: hushed. L. 33 Pan: used here for the Lord of all.

1. 21 Lars and Lemures: household gods and spirits of relations dead. Flamens (1. 24) Roman priests. That twice-batter'd god (1. 29) Dagon.

1. 6 Osiris, the Egyptian god of Agriculture (here, perhaps by confusion with Apis, figured as a Bull), was torn to pieces by Typho and embalmed after death in a sacred chest. This mythe, reproduced in Syria and Greece in the legends of Thammuz, Adonis, and perhaps Absyrtus, represents the annual death of the Sun or the Year under the influences of the winter darkness. Horus, the son of Osiris, as the New Year, in his turn overcomes Typho.-It suited the genius of Milton's time to regard this primaeval poetry and philosophy of the seasons, which has a further reference to the contest of Good and Evil in Creation, as a malignant idolatry. Shelley's Chorus in Hellas, Worlds on worlds,' treats the subject in a larger and sweeter spirit. L. 8 unshower'd grass: as watered by the Nile only.

49 LXIV The Late Massacre: the Vaudois persecution, carried on in 1655 by the Duke of Savoy. This 'collect in verse,' as it has been justly named, is the most mighty Sonnet in any language known to the Editor. Readers should observe that, unlike our sonnets of the sixteenth century, it is constructed on the original Italian or Provençal model,-unquestionably far superior to the imperfect form employed by Shakespeare and Drummond.

50 LXV

Cromwell returned from Ireland in 1650. Hence the prophecies, not strictly fulfilled, of his deference to the Parliament, in stanzas 21-24.

This Ode, beyond doubt one of the finest in our language, and more in Milton's style than has been reached by any other poet, is occasionally obscure from imitation of the condensed Latin syntax. The meaning of st. 5 is 'rivalry or hostility are the same to a lofty spirit, and limitation more hateful than opposition. The allusion in st. 11 is to the old physical doctrines of the nonexistence of a vacuum and the impenetrability of matter:-in st. 17 to the omen traditionally connected with the foundation of the Capitol at Rome. The ancient belief that certain years in life complete natural periods and are hence peculiarly exposed to death, is introduced in st. 26 by the word climacteric.

Lycidas. The person lamented is Milton's college friend Edward King, drowned in 1637 whilst crossing from Chester to Ireland.

Strict Pastoral Poetry was first written or perfected by the Dorian Greeks settled in Sicily: but the con

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ventional use of it, exhibited more magnificently in Lycidas than in any other pastoral, is apparently of Roman origin. Milton, employing the noble freedom of a great artist, has here united ancient mythology, with what may be called the modern mythology of Camus and Saint Peter,-to direct Christian images. -The metrical structure of this glorious poem is partly derived from Italian models.

1. 11 Sisters of the sacred well: the Muses, said to frequent the fountain Helicon on Mount Parnassus. 1. 10 Mona: Anglesea, called by the Welsh Inis Dowil or the Dark Island, from its dense forests. Deva (1. 11) the Dee: a river which probably derived its inagical character from Celtic traditions: it was long the boundary of Briton and Saxon.-These places are introduced, as being near the scene of the shipwreck. Orpheus (1. 14) was torn to pieces by Thracian women. Amaryllis and Neaera (1. 24, 25) names used here for the love-idols of poets: as Damoetas previously for a shepherd. L. 31 the blind Fury: Atropos, fabled to cut the thread of life. Arethuse (1. 41) and Minoius: Sicilian and Italian waters here alluded to as synonymous with the pastoral poetry of Theocritus and Virgil.

1. 3 oat: pipe, used here like Collins' oaten stop 1. 1, No. CXLVI, for Song. L. 11 Hippotades: Aeolus, god of the Winds. Panope (1. 14) a Nereid. The names of local deities in the Hellenic mythology express generally some feature in the natural landscape, which the Greeks studied and analyzed with their usual unequalled insight and feeling. Panope represents the boundlessness of the ocean-horizon when seen from a height, as compared with the limited horizon.of the land in hilly countries such as Greece or Asia Minor. Camus (1. 18) the Cam; put for King's University. The sanguine flower (1. 21) the Hyacinth of the ancients; probably our Iris. The pilot (1. 24) Saint Peter, figuratively introduced as the head of the Church on earth, to foretel 'the ruin of our corrupted clergy, then in their heighth' under Laud's primacy.

1. 3 the wolf: Popery. Alpheus (1. 7) a stream in Southern Greece, supposed to flow underseas to join the Arethuse. Swart star (1. 13) the Dogstar, called swarthy because its heliacal rising in ancient times occurred soon after midsummer. L. 34 moist vows: either tearful prayers, or prayers for one at sea. Bellerus (1. 35) a giant, apparently created here by Milton to personify Bellerium, the ancient title of the Land's End. The great Vision:-the story was that the Archangel Michael had appeared on the rock by Marazion in Mount's Bay which bears his name. Milton calls on him to turn his eyes from the south

PAGE NO.

58 LXVI

60 LXX

61

homeward, and to pity Lycidas, if his body has drifted into the troubled waters off the Land's End. Finisterre being the land due south of Marazion, two places in that district (then by our trade with Corunna probably less unfamiliar to English ears), are named,-Namancos now Mujio in Galicia, Bayona north of the Minho, or perhaps a fortified rock (one of the Cies Islands) not unlike Saint Michael's Mount, at the entrance of Vigo Bay.

1. 4 ore rays of golden light. Doric lay (1. 23) Sicilian, pastoral.

The assault was an attack on London expected in 1642, when the troops of Charles I reached Brentford. 'Written on his door' was in the original title of this sonnet. Milton was then living in Aldersgate Street.

1. 10 The Emathian Conqueror: When Thebes was destroyed (B. C. 335) and the citizens massacred by thousands, Alexander ordered the house of Pindar to be spared. He was as incapable of appreciating the Poet as Lewis XIV of appreciating Racine: but even the narrow and barbarian mind of Alexander could understand the advantage of a showy act of homage to Poetry.

1. 1 the repeated air Of sad Electra's poet: Amongst Plutarch's vague stories, he says that when the Spartan confederacy in 404 B. C. took Athens, a proposal to demolish it was rejected through the effect produced on the commanders by hearing part of a chorus from the Electra of Euripides sung at a feast. There is however no apparent congruity between the lines quoted (167, 8 Ed. Dindorf) and the result ascribed to them.

62 LXXIII This high-toned and lovely Madrigal is quite in the style, and worthy of, the 'pure Simonides.'

63 LXXV Vaughan's beautiful though quaint verses should be compared with Wordsworth's great Ode, No.

CCLXXXVII.

64 LXXVI Favonius: the spring wind.

65 LXXVII Themis: the goddess of justice. Skinner was grandson by his mother to Sir E. Coke;-hence, as pointed out by Mr. Keightley, Milton's allusion to the bench. L. 8: Sweden was then at war with Poland, and France with the Spanish Netherlands.

67 LXXIX 1. 10 Sydneian showers: either in allusion to the conversations in the 'Arcadia,' or to Sidney himself as a model of 'gentleness' in spirit and de

meanour.

71 LXXXIV Elizabeth of Bohemia: Daughter to James I, and ancestor to Sophia of Hanover. These lines are a fine specimen of gallant and courtly compliment. 72 LXXXV Lady M. Ley was daughter to Sir J. Ley, afterwards Earl of Marlborough, who died March, 1628-9, coin

PAGE NO.

cidently with the dissolution of the third Parliament of Charles' reign. Hence Milton poetically compares his death to that of the Orator Isocrates of Athens, after Philip's victory in 328 B. C.

76 XCII, XCIII These are quite a Painter's poems. 80 XCIX

84 CV

85 CVI

S7 CVII
SS CVIII

90 CXI

92 CXII

From Prison: to which his active support of Charles I twice brought the high-spirited writer.

Inserted in Book II as written in the character of a Soldier of Fortune in the Seventeenth Century. Waly waly: an exclamation of sorrow, the root and the pronunciation of which are preserved in the word caterwaul. Brae, hillside: burn, brook: busk, adorn. Saint Anton's Well: at the foot of Arthur's Seat by Edinburgh. Cramasie, crimson. burd, maiden.

corbies, crows: fail, turf: hause, neck: theek, thatch. If not in their origin, in their present form this and the two preceding poems appear due to the Seventeenth Century, and have therefore been placed in Book II.

The remark quoted in the note to No. XLVII applies equally to these truly wonderful verses, which, like 'Lycidas,' may be regarded as a test of any reader's insight into the most poetical aspects of Poetry. The general differences between them are vast: but in imaginative intensity Marvell and Shelley are closely related.-This poem is printed as a translation in Marvell's works: but the original Latin is obviously his own. The most striking verses in it, here quoted as the book is rare, answer more or less to stanzas 2 and 6:

Alma Quies, teneo te! et te, germana Quietis, Simplicitas! vos ergo diu per templa, per urbes Quaesivi, regum perque alfa palatia, frustra: Sed vos hortorum per opaca silentia, longe Celarunt plantae virides, et concolor umbra. L'Allegro and Il Penseroso. It is a striking proof of Milton's astonishing power, that these, the earliest pure Descriptive Lyrics in our language, should still remain the best in a style which so many great poets have since attempted. The Bright and the Thoughtful aspects of Nature are their subjects: but each is preceded by a mythological introduction in a mixed Classical and Italian manner. The meaning of the first is that Gaiety is the child of Nature; of the second, that Pensiveness is the daughter of Sorrow and Genius.

1. 2: Perverse ingenuity has conjectured that for Cerberus we should read Erebus, who in the Mythology is brother at once and husband of Night. But the issue of that union is not Sadness, but Day and Aether:-completing the circle of primary Creation, as the parents are both children of Chaos, tho first-begotten of all things. (Hesiod)

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