Class £H3££2* Book ^ GqpgtaN? CCPVK1GHT DEP08U ^'ALLEGRO, IL PENSEROSO, COMUS AND LYCIDAS MILTON 'S L f allegro, II penseroRO, Comus and Lyoidas; edited irith introduction and notes by T. p. Huntington, ( standard English olassioe ) B08T0H, Ginn and Co. f 1000. 2nd. Copy. .f[y. 2 Copies rec'd. Jan 5th, 190 G 51036. Copyright no. 1899 79165 Deo. 6. g.: Ma, f-v^i. After an engraving by FAITHORNE. So tbe /ifcemorE of flhv /Iftotbet PREFACE. In Milton's Tractate of Education there is a passage which suggests in figure and with fine harmony the duty as well as the delight of every reader of Milton's poetry. " I shall . . . straight conduct you to a hill-side," writes Milton to Master Hartlib, "where I will point you out the right path of a virtuous and noble education, laborious indeed at the first ascent, but also so smooth, so green, so full of goodly prospect and melodious sounds, that the harp of Orpheus was not more charming." With the reader of Milton, in like manner, the effort, laborious though it be, must ever precede the pleasure. Every line, every word of Milton's poetry has its meaning, and very often diligent search must be made for it ; but it is nevertheless true that he who gives his days and nights to the search for this meaning and finds it wins for himself a culture scarcely less precious than Milton's own " virtuous and noble education." Since so much has been written about Milton, and that, too, so ably, it seemed wiser to give in the Introduction to the present volume the best of what has been written by some of the more modern critics about the poems here edited rather than to attempt a criticism which could hardly hope to equal, much less to better, what has already been so admirably done. Furthermore, the diver- gence of views expressed by the critics here quoted will give the student abundant opportunity for discussion, and thereby lead to the formation of opinions more just than could possibly result from the perusal of any one man's single criticism. The text of the poems is taken from Masson's library edition of Milton's poetical works. Here, as in the case of the selections printed in the Introduction, the reprint is as exact as it was possible to make it. The Notes, as must be the case where serious study is to be made of poems whose lines have been so much fought over by scholars as these of Milton, are necessarily rather full. Several important interpretations are sometimes given to a single passage. Vlll PREFACE. The necessity the student is thus put to in choosing the most reasonable of these — and it is the business of the teacher to see that he has good reasons for his preference — ought to lead to clear thinking. The study of parallel passages should be left ordinarily to the maturer work of the college, but in the case of Milton some work of this sort is absolutely essential to an appre- ciation of his genius. Some limit needs to be set, however, and hence all parallel passages in works later than Milton's time, with two or three exceptions, are rigidly excluded, while those in works before his time are given only where the resemblance is so close as to make it probable that they were actually suggestive to him. Passages in the Bible, in Shakspere, and in Milton's other poems are merely cited, it being supposed that every student has at hand a Bible and the works of Milton and Shakspere. These passages should in every case be looked up, both for the light they will throw upon the text and for the familiarity this sort of reference will breed with three of the world's great books. Ques- tions and problems, such as the editor's experience in teaching High School students has shown him can be profitably set for independent study, are dispersed throughout the Notes. The obligations of the editor are many. In the Notes use has been made of all the important editions of Milton's works, from Newton's to the present time, and with the exception of the matter taken from the editions of Warton and Keightley, to which the editor unfortunately did not have access, all quotations and citations are made at first hand. In the case of the exceptions, the editor has consulted such reliable sources, usually indicated in the Notes, that it is hoped no inaccuracy has resulted. Credit has everywhere been freely given for all matter which did not seem common property. To the Macmillan Company the editor is indebted for permission to use Masson's text and three of the selections in the Introduction. For other copyrighted material in the Introduction he is indebted to Harper & Brothers, to Long- mans, Green & Co., to Walter Scott, to D. Appleton & Co., and to Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co. Prof. Albert E. Jack of Lake Forest University offered a number of suggestions, which have been made use of in the Notes. T. F. H. Stanford University, California, October 16, 1899. CONTENTS. PAGE Introduction xi Critical Comments xi Bibliographical Note i L'Allegro i II Penseroso 7 Comus 14 Lycidas 50 Notes 59 INTRODUCTION. I. CRITICAL COMMENTS. WORDSWORTH'S SONNET TO MILTON.i Milton ! thou should'st be living at this hour : England hath need of thee : she is a fen Of stagnant waters : altar, sword, and pen, Fireside, the heroic wealth of hall and bower, Have forfeited their ancient English dower Of inward happiness. We are selfish men ; Oh ! raise us up, return to us again ; And give us manners, virtue, freedom, power. Thy soul was like a Star, and dwelt apart : Thou hadst a voice whose sound was like the sea : Pure as the naked heavens, majestic, free, So didst thou travel on life's common way, In cheerful godliness ; and yet thy heart The lowliest duties on herself did lay. [Brooke, English Literature, pp. 161-168. 2 ] John Milton was the last of the Elizabethans, and, except Shakespeare, far the greatest of them all. Born 1 This, Milton's own On the Late Massacre in Piedmont, and Keats's On First Looking into Chapman's Homer are among the best sonnets in our language. For some comments on the first line of the present sonnet, see the introductory essay in Ernest Myers's Selected Prose Writ- ings of John Milton. 2 For some strictures on Brooke's criticism as it was originally pub- lished, see Matthew Arnold's essay entitled A Guide to English Literature. xi xii INTR OD UC TION. in 1608, in Bread Street (close by the Mermaid Tavern), he may have seen Shakespeare, for he remained till he was sixteen in London. His literary life may be said to begin with his entrance into Cambridge, in 1625, the year of the accession of Charles I. Nicknamed the " Lady of Christ's " from his beauty, delicate taste, and moral life, he soon attained a reputation by his Latin poems and discourses, and by his English poems which revealed as clear and original a genius as that of Chaucer and Spenser. Of Milton even more than of the two others, it may be said that he was "whole in himself, and owed to none." The Ode to the Nativity, 1629, the third poem he composed, while it went back to the Elizabethan age in beauty, in instinc- tive fire, went forward into a new world of art, the world where the architecture of the lyric is finished with majesty and music. The next year heard the noble sounding strains of At a Solemn Music ; and the sonnet, On Attaining the Age of Twenty-three, reveals in dignified beauty that intense personality which lives, like a force, through every line he wrote. He left the university in 1632, and went to live at Horton, near Windsor, where he spent five years, steadily reading the Greek and Latin writers, and amusing himself with mathematics and music. Poetry was not neglected. The Allegro and jPenseroso were written in 1633 and prob- ably the Arcades ; Comics was acted in 1634, and Lycidas composed in 1637. They prove that though Milton was Puritan in heart his Puritanism was of that earlier type which disdained neither the arts nor letters. But they represent a growing revolt from the Court and the Church. The Penseroso prefers the contemplative life to the mirth- ful, and Comics, though a masque, rose into a celestial poem to the glory of temperance, and under its allegory attacked the Court. Three years later, Lycidas interrupts its exqui- INTRODUCTION. xiii site stream of poetry with a fierce and resolute onset on the greedy shepherds of the Church. Milton had taken his Presbyterian bent. In 1638 he went to Italy, the second home of so many of the English poets, visited Florence where he saw Galileo, and then passed on to Rome. At Naples he heard the sad news of civil war, which determined him to return ; " inas- much as I thought it base to be traveling at my ease for amusement, while my fellow-countrymen at home were fighting for liberty." At the meeting of the Long Parlia- ment we find him in a house in Aldersgate, where he lived till 1645. He had projected while abroad a great epic poem on the subject of Arthur, but in London his mind changed, and among a number of subjects, tended at last to Paradise Lost, which he meant to throw into the form of a Greek Tragedy with lyrics and choruses. Suddenly his whole life changed, and for twenty years — 1640-60 — he was carried out of art into politics, out of poetry into prose. Most of the Sonnets, however, belong to this time. Stately, rugged, or graceful, as he pleased to make them, some with the solemn grandeur of Hebrew psalms, others having the classic ease of Horace, some of his own grave tenderness, they are true, unlike those of Shakespeare and Spenser, to the correct form of this dif- ficult kind of poetry. But they were all he could now do of his true work. Before the Civil War began in 1642, he had written five vigorous pamphlets against Episcopacy. Six more pamphlets appeared in the next two years. One of these was the Areopagitica ; or, Speech for the Liberty of U?tlicensed Printing, 1644, a bold and eloquent attack on the censorship of the press by the Presbyterians. Another, remarkable, like the Areopagitica, for its finer prose, was a tract On Education. The four pamphlets in which he advo- xi v INTR OB UC TION. cated conditional divorce made him still more the horror of the Presbyterians. In 1646 he published his poems, and in that year the sonnet On the Forcers of Conscience shows that he had wholly ceased to be Presbyterian. His politi- cal pamphlets begin when his Tenure of Kings and Magis- trates defended in 1649 the execution of the king. The Eikonoclastes answered the Eikon Basilike (a portraiture of the sufferings of the king) ; and his famous Latin Defence for the People of England, 1651, replied to Salmasius's Defence of Charles L, and inflicted so pitiless a lashing on the great Leyden scholar that Milton's fame went over the whole of Europe. In the next year he wholly lost his sight. But he continued his work (being Latin secretary since 1649) when Cromwell was made Protector, and wrote another Defence for the English People, 1654, and a further Defence of Hiniself against scurrilous charges. This closed the controversy in 1655. In the last year of the Protector's life he began the Paradise Lost, but the death of Cromwell threw him back into politics, and three more pamphlets on the questions of a Free Church and a free Commonwealth were useless to prevent the Restoration. It was a wonder he was not put to death in 1660, and he was in hiding and also in custody for a time. At last he settled in a house near Bunhill Fields. It was here that Paradise Lost was finished, before the end of 1665, and then published in 1667. We may regret that Milton was shut away from his art during twenty years of controversy. But it may be that the poems he wrote when the great cause he fought for had closed in seeming defeat but real victory, gained from its solemn issues and from the moral grandeur with which he wrought for its ends their majestic movement, their grand style, and their grave beauty. During the struggle he had INTR OD UC TION. x v never forgotten his art. " I may one day hope," he said, speaking of his youthful studies, " to have ye again, in a still time, when there shall be no chiding. Not in these Noises," and the saying strikes the note of calm sublimity which is kept in Paradise Lost. As we read the great epic, we feel that the lightness of heart of the Allegro, that even the quiet classic philosophy of the Comus, are gone. The beauty of the poem is like that of a stately temple, which, vast in conception, is involved in detail. The style is the greatest in the whole range of English poetry. Milton's intellectual force sup- ports and condenses his imaginative force, and his art is almost too conscious of itself. Sublimity is its essential difference. The subject is one phase of the great and uni- versal subject of high poetic thought and passion, that struggle of Light with Darkness, of Evil with Good, which, arising in a hundred myths, keeps its undying attraction to the present day. But its great difficulty in his case was that he was obliged to interest us, for a great part of the poem, in two persons, who, being innocent, were with- out any such play of human passion and trouble as we find in GEdipus, ^Eneas, Hamlet, or Alceste. In the noble art with which this is done Milton is supreme. The interest of the story collects at first round the character of Satan, but he grows meaner as the poem develops, and his second degradation after he has destroyed innocence is one of the finest and most consistent motives in the poem. This at once disposes of the view that Milton meant Satan to be the hero of the epic. His hero is Man. The deep tender- ness of Milton, his love of beauty, the passionate fitness of his words to his work, his religious depth, fill the scenes in which he paints Paradise, our parents and their fall, and at last all thought and emotion center round Adam and Eve, XVI INTRODUCTION. until the closing lines leave us with their lonely image on our minds. In every part of the poem, in every character in it, as indeed in all his poems, Milton's intense individu- ality appears. It is a pleasure to find it. The egotism of such a man, said Coleridge, is a revelation of spirit. f Paradise Lost was followed by Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes, published together in 167 1. Paradise Regained opens with the journey of Christ into the wilder- ness after his baptism, and its four books describe the temptation of Christ by Satan, and the answers and vic- tory of the Redeemer. The speeches in it overwhelm the action, and their learned argument is only relieved by a few descriptions ; but these, as in that of Athens, are done with Milton's highest power. Its solemn beauty of quietude, and a more severe style than that of Paradise Lost, make us feel in it that Milton has grown older. In Samson Agonistes the style is still severer, even to the verge of a harshness which the sublimity alone tends to modify. It is a choral drama, after the Greek model. Samson in his blindness is described, is called on to make sport for the Philistines, and overthrows them in the end. Samson represents the fallen Puritan cause, and Samson's victorious death Milton's hopes for the final triumph of that cause. The poem has all the grandeur of the last words of a great man in whom there was now " calm of mind, all passion spent." It is also the last word of the music of the Elizabethan drama long after its notes seemed hushed, and its deep sound is strange in the midst of the shallow noise of the Restoration. Soon afterwards, November, 1674, blind and old and fallen on evil days, Milton died ; but neither blindness, old age, nor evil days could^-lessen the inward light, nor impair the imaginative power with which he sang, it seemed with the angels, the INTRODUCTION. xvii "undisturbed song of pure concent," until he joined him- self, at last, with those "just spirits who wear victorious palms." To the greatness of the artist Milton joined the majesty of a clear and lofty character. His poetic style was as stately as his character, and proceeded from it. Living at a time when criticism began to purify the verse of England, and being himself well acquainted with the great classical models, his work is seldom weakened by the false conceits and the intemperance of the Elizabethan writers, and yet is as imaginative as theirs, and as various. He has not their naturalness, nor all their intensity, but he has a larger grace, a lovelier colour, a closer eye for nature, a more finished art, and a sublime dignity they did not possess. All the kinds of poetry which he touched he touched with the ease of great strength, and with so much energy, that they became new in his hands. He put a fresh life into the masque, the sonnet, the elegy, the descriptive lyric, the song, the choral drama; and he created the epic in England. The lighter love poem he never wrote, and we are grateful that he kept his coarse satirical power apart from his poetry. In some points he was untrue to his descent from the Elizabethans, for he had no dramatic faculty, and he had no humour. He summed up in himself the learned and artistic influences of the English Renais- sance, and handed them on to us. His taste was as severe, his verse as polished, his method and language as strict as those of the school of Dryden and Pope that grew up when he was old. A literary past and present thus met in him, nor did he fail, like all the greatest men, to make a cast into the future. He established the poetry of pure natural description. Lastly, he did not represent in any way the England that followed the Stuarts, but he did rep- xviii INTRODUCTION. resent Puritan England, and the whole spirit of Puritanism from its cradle to its grave. [Pattison, Milton, pp. 19, 24-29.] The fame of the author of Paradise Lost has over-shad- owed that of the author of L' Allegro, II Penseroso, and Lycidas. Yet had Paradise Lost never been written, these three poems, with Comics, would have sufficed to place their author in a class apart, and above all those who had used the English language for poetical purposes before him. . . . TV Tr -7V- TV Tr ... a naturalist is at once aware that Milton had neither the eye nor the ear of a naturalist. At no time, even before his loss of sight, was he an exact observer of natural objects. It may be that he knew a skylark from a red- breast, and did not confound the dog-rose with the honey- suckle. But I am sure that he had never acquired that interest in nature's things and ways which leads to close and loving watching of them. He had not that sense of out-door nature, empirical and not scientific, which endows the Angler of his cotemporary Walton with his enduring charm, and which is to be acquired only by living in the open country in childhood. Milton is not a man of the fields, but of books. His life is in his study, and when he steps abroad into the air he carries his study thoughts with him. He does look at nature, but he sees her through books. Natural impressions are received from without, but always in those forms of beautiful speech in which the poets of all ages have clothed them. His epithets are not, like the epithets of the school of Dryden and Pope, culled from the Gradus ad Parnassum ; they are expressive of some reality, but it is of a real emotion in the spectator's INTR OD UC TION. xix soul, not of any quality detected by keen insight in the objects themselves. This emotion Milton's art stamps with an epithet which shall convey the added charm of classical reminiscence. When, e.g., he speaks of " the wand'ring moon," the original significance of the epithet comes home to the scholarly reader with the enhanced effect of its association with the "errantem lunam " of Horace. Nor because it is adopted from Horace has the epithet here the second-hand effect of a copy. If Milton sees nature through books, he still sees it. " To behold the wand'ring moon, Riding near her highest noon, Like one that had been led astray, Through the heaven's wide pathless way, And oft, as if her head she bow'd, Stooping through a fleecy cloud." No allegation that " wand'ring moon " is borrowed from Horace can hide from us that Milton, though he remem- bered Horace, had watched the phenomenon with a feeling so intense that he projected his own soul's throb into the object before him, and named it with what Thomson calls "recollected love." Milton's attitude toward nature is not that of a scientific naturalist, nor even that of a close observer. It is that of a poet who feels its total influence too powerfully to dissect it. If, as I have said, Milton reads books first and nature afterwards, it is not to test nature by his books, but to learn from both. He is learning, not books, but from books. All he reads, sees, hears, is to him but nutriment for the soul. He is making himself. Man is to him the highest object ; nature is subordinate to man, not only in its more vulgar uses, but as an excitant of fine emotion. xx INTRODUCTION. He is not concerned to register the facts and phenomena of nature, but to convey the impression they make on a sensitive soul. The external forms of things are to be pre- sented to us as transformed through the heart and mind of the poet. The moon is endowed with life and will, " stoop- ing," "riding," "wand'ring," "bowing her head," not as a frigid personification, and because the ancient poets so per- sonified her, but by communication to her of the intense agitation which the nocturnal spectacle rouses in the poet's , own breast. I # * * * * In Milton, nature is not put forward as the poet's theme. His theme is man, in the two contrasted moods of joyous emotion or grave reflection. The shifting scenery ministers to the varying mood. Thomson, in the Seasons (1726), sets himself to render natural phenomena as they truly are. He has left us a vivid presentation in gorgeous language of the naturalistic calendar of the changing year. Milton, in these two idylls, has recorded a day of twenty-four hours. But he has not registered the phenomena ; he places us at the standpoint of the man before whom they deploy. And the man, joyous or melancholy, is not a bare spectator of them ; he is the student, compounded of sensibility and intelligence, of whom we are not told that he saw so and so, or that he felt so, but with whom we are made copart- ners of his thoughts and feeling. Description melts into emotion, and contemplation bodies itself in imagery. All the charm of rural life is there, but it is not tendered to us in the form - of a landscape ; the scenery is subordinated to the human figure in the center. These two short idylls are marked by a gladsome spon- taneity which never came to Milton again. The delicate fancy and feeling which play about V Allegro and 77 INTRODUCTION. xxi Penseroso never reappear, and form a strong contrast to the austere imaginings of his later poetical period. These two poems have the freedom and frolic, the natural grace of movement, the improvisation, of the best Elizabethan examples, while both thoughts and words are under a strict economy unknown to the diffuse exuberance of the Spenserians. In Lycidas (1637) we have reached the high-water mark of English poesy and of Milton's own production. A period of a century and a half was to elapse before poetry in Eng- land seemed, in Wordsworth's Ode on Immortality (1807), to be rising again toward the level of inspiration which it had once attained in Lycidas. And in the development of the Miltonic genius this wonderful dirge marks the cul- minating point. As the twin idylls of 1632 show a great advance upon the Ode on the Nativity (1629), the growth of the poetic mind during the five years which follow 1632 is registered in Lycidas. Like the L 1 Allegro and LI Pen- jseroso, Lycidas is laid out on the lines of the accepted pastoral fiction ; like them it offers exquisite touches of idealised rural life. But Lycidas opens up a deeper vein of feeling, a patriot passion so vehement and dangerous that, like that which stirred the Hebrew prophet, it is compelled to veil itself from power, or from sympathy, in utterance made purposely enigmatical. The passage which begins " Last came and last did go " raises in us a thrill of awe-struck expectation which I can only compare with that excited by the Cassandra of yEschylus's Agamemnon. For the reader to feel this, he must have present in memory the circumstances of England in 1637. He must place him- self as far as possible in the situation of a cotemporary. The study of Milton's poetry compels the study of his time; and Professor Masson's six volumes are not too xxil INTR OD UC TION. much to enable us to understand that there were real causes for the intense passion which glows underneath the poet's words — a passion which unexplained would be thought to be intrusive. The historical exposition must be gathered from the English history of the period, which may be read in Pro- fessor Masson's excellent summary. All I desire to point out here is, that in Lyadas Milton's original picturesque vein is for the first time crossed with one of quite another sort, stern, determined, obscurely indicative of suppressed passion, and the resolution to do or die. The fanaticism of the covenanter and the sad grace of Petrarch seem to meet in Milton's monody. Yet these opposites, instead of neutralising each other, are blended into one harmonious whole by the presiding, but invisible, genius of the poet. The conflict between the old cavalier world — the years of gaiety and festivity of a splendid and pleasure-loving court, and the new Puritan world into which love and pleasure were not to enter — this conflict which was commencing in the social life of England, is also begun in Milton's own breast, and is reflected in Lycidas. " For we were nurs'd upon the self-same hill." Here is the sweet mournfulness of the Spenserian time, upon whose joys Death is the only intruder. Pass onward a little, and you are in presence of the tremendous " Two-handed engine at the door," the terror of which is enhanced by its obscurity. We are very sure that the avenger is there, though we know not who he is. In these thirty lines we have the preluding mutterings of the storm which was to sweep away mask and revel and song, to inhibit the drama, and suppress INTRODUCTION. xxiii poetry. In the earlier poems Milton's muse has sung in the tones of the age that is passing away ; except in his austere chastity, a cavalier. Though even in f Allegro Dr. Johnson truly detects " some melancholy in his mirth.*' In Lycidas, for a moment, the tones of both ages, the past and the coming, are combined, and then Milton leaves behind him forever the golden age, and one half of his poetic genius. He never fulfilled the promise with which Lycidas concludes, "To-morrow to fresh fields and pastures new." [Garnett, Life of Milton, pp. 49-54.] The " Penseroso " and the "Allegro," notwithstanding that each piece is the antithesis of the other, are comple- mentary rather than contrary, and may be, in a sense, regarded as one poem, whose theme is the praise of the reasonable life. It resembles one of those pictures in which the effect is gained by contrasted masses of light and shade, but each is more nicely mellowed and inter- fused with the qualities of the other than it lies within the resources of pictorial skill to effect. Mirth has an under- tone of gravity, and melancholy of cheerfulness. There is no antagonism between the states of mind depicted ; and no rational lover, whether of contemplation or of recrea- tion, would find any difficulty in combining the two. The limpidity of the diction is even more striking than its beauty. Never were ideas of such dignity embodied in verse so easy and familiar, and with such apparent absence of effort. The landscape-painting is that of the seven- teenth century, absolutely true in broad effects, sometimes ill-defined and even inaccurate in minute details. Some of these blemishes are terrible in nineteenth-century eyes, accustomed to the photography of our Brownings and xxiv INTRODUCTION. Patmores. Milton would probably have made light of them, and perhaps we owe him some thanks for thus prac- tically refuting the heresy that inspiration implies infalli- bility. Yet the poetry of his blindness abounds with proof that he had made excellent use of his eyes while he had them, and no part of his poetry wants instances of subtle and delicate observation worthy of the most scrutinizing modern : — " Thee, chantress, oft the woods among, I woo, to hear thy evensong ; And, missing thee, I walk unseen On the dry, smooth-shaven green." "The song of the nightingale," remarks Peacock, " ceases about the time the grass is mown." The charm, however, is less in such detached beauties, however exquisite, than in the condensed opulence — " every epithet a text for a canto," says Macaulay — and in the general impression of "plain living and high thinking," pursued in the midst of every charm of nature and every refinement of culture, com- bining the ideal of Horton with the ideal of Cambridge. " Lycidas " is far more boldly conventional, not merely in the treatment of landscape, but in the general concep- tion and machinery. An initial effort of the imagination is required to feel with the poet ; it is not wonderful that no such wing bore up the solid Johnson. Talk of Milton and his fellow-collegian as shepherds! "We know that they never drove afield, and that they had no flocks to batten." There is, in fact, according to Johnson, neither nature nor truth nor art nor pathos in the poem, for all these things are inconsistent with the introduction of a shepherd of souls in the character of a shepherd of sheep. A nineteenth-century reader, it may be hoped, finds no mere difficulty in idealizing Edward King as a shepherd INTRODUCTION. xxv than in personifying the ocean calm as "sleek Panope and all her sisters," which, to be sure, may have been a trouble to Johnson. If, however, Johnson is deplorably prosaic, neither can we agree with Pattison that " in ' Lycidas ' we have reached the high-water mark of English Poesy and of Milton's own production." Its innumerable beauties are rather exquisite than magnificent. It is an elegy, and can- not, therefore, rank as high as an equally consummate example of epic, lyric, or dramatic art. Even as elegy it is surpassed by the other great English masterpiece, "Adonais," in fire and grandeur. There is no incongruity in "Adonais" like the introduction of the "pilot of the Galilean lake"; its invective and indignation pour natu- rally out of the subject ; their expression is not, as in "Lycidas," a splendid excrescence. There is no such example of sustained eloquence in " Lycidas " as the seven concluding stanzas of "Adonais" beginning, "Go thou to Rome." But the balance is redressed by the fact that the beauties of "Adonais " are mostly of the imitable sort, and those of "Lycidas " of the inimitable. Shelley's eloquence is even too splendid for elegy. It wants the dainty thrills and tremors of subtle versification, and the witcheries of verbal magic in which "Lycidas" is so rich — "the open- ing eyelids of the morn ; " " smooth-sliding Mincius, crowned with vocal reeds ; " Camus's garment, " inwrought with figures dim ; " " the great vision of the guarded mount ; " " the tender stops of various quills ; " " with eager thought warbling his Doric lay." It will be noticed that these exquisite phrases have little to do with Lycidas himself, and it is a fact not to be ignored, that though Milton and Shelley doubtless felt more deeply than Dryden when he composed his scarcely inferior threnody on Anne Killegrew, whom he had never seen, both might have found xxvi INTRODUCTION. subjects of grief that touched them more nearly. Shelley tells us frankly that "in another's woe he wept his own." We cannot doubt of whom Milton was thinking when he wrote \_Lycidas, 70-84]. . . . " Comus," the richest fruit of Milton's early genius, is the epitome of the man at the age at which he wrote it. It bespeaks the scholar and idealist, whose sacred enthusi- asm is in some danger of contracting a taint of pedantry for want of acquaintance with men and affairs. The Elder Brother is a prig, and his dialogues with his junior reveal the same solemn insensibility to the humorous which char- acterizes the kindred genius of Wordsworth, and would have provoked the kindly smile of Shakespeare. It is singular to find the inevitable flaw of " Paradise Lost " prefigured here, and the wicked enchanter made the real hero of the piece. These defects are interesting, because they represent the nature of Milton as it was then, noble and disinterested to the height of imagination, but self- assertive, unmellowed, angular. They disappear entirely when he expatiates in the regions of exalted fancy, as in the introductory discourse of the Spirit, and the invoca- tion to Sabrina. They recur when he moralizes ; and his morality is too interwoven with the texture of his piece to be other than obtrusive. He fatigues with virtue, as Lucan' fatigues with liberty ; in both instances the scarcely avoid- able error of a young preacher. What glorious morality it is no one need be told ; nor is there any poem in the language where beauties of thought, diction, and descrip- tion spring up more thickly than in "Comus." No drama out of Shakespeare has furnished such a number of the noblest familiar quotations. It is, indeed, true that many of these jewels are fetched from the mines of other poets : great as Milton's obligations to Nature were, his obligations INTRODUCTION. xxvil to books were greater. But he has made all his own by the alchemy of his genius, and borrows little but to improve. . . . [Brooke, Milton, pp. 18-19, 22-24, 26-27.] The Allegro and Penseroso, the resemblances to which in previous writers, as in Burton, and Beaumont and Fletcher, only prove that Milton had read English literature, and could better what he borrowed if he borrowed it — repre- sent Nature, and Man, and Art as they appear to a man filled with an imaginative joy and an imaginative sadness. The Allegro, which begins with the early morning and ends at night, is paralleled thought by thought, scene by scene, with the Penseroso, which begins with the late evening and ends towards the noon of the next day. But the Penseroso closes with the wish — which, not paralleled in the Allegro, makes us know that Milton preferred the pensive to the mirthful temper — That he may live on into old age, the contemplative life, " Till old experience do attain, To something like prophetic strain." Both poems are ushered in with a stately introduction, and change to a quicker and lighter measure, of which the scheme appears to be trochaic, though iambics are often introduced and especially in the Penseroso. The greatest pains is bestowed upon the rhythm. There is nothing hazarded, nothing careless, yet the poems move, it seems, with careless grace. They are a landmark in the metrical art of poetry, and they are conscious of their art through- out. The words are arranged and chosen to imitate or suggest the thing described : alliteration is used to heighten the xxviii INTRODUCTION. effect, but much more sparingly than by the earlier men, ( such as his "original," Spenser. 1 Throughout the Allegro the verse frequently rushes as if borne along by very joy ; its character is swiftness and smoothness. Few if any pauses occur in the midst of the lines. Throughout the Penseroso the verse frequently pauses in the midst of the lines. It rests, like a pensive man who, walking, stops to think, and its movement is slow, even stately. Both poems are full of natural description. But it is neither the description which imposes one's own feeling on nature, nor the moralising description of Gray, nor does it even resemble that description which in Shelley and Wordsworth was built on the thought that Nature was alive and man's companion. It is the pure description of things seen, seen not necessarily through the poet's own mood, but always in direct relation to Man and to the special mood of man's mind which Milton has chosen as the ground- work for each poem. The allusiveness of the poems — and extreme allusiveness is a characteristic mark, and often a fault, of the poetry of Milton — pleases by the claim it makes on study. The extreme simplicity of the two motives — and Milton, how- ever his poems are involved, has always a simple motive — makes these poems simple, and this is one reason why children as well as others understand and have pleasure in them. The picturesqueness of the scenes, the clearcut and vivid outline of the things described — and this also is a constant excellence of Milton, though he sometimes wil- fully spoils it by digression, — is also a source of delight to young and old : while the work of the higher imagination is felt as a shaping power in the poems, as the Orphean 1 " Milton has acknowledged to me," says Dryden, " that Spenser was his original." — Brooke. INTRO DUCT/0 A'. xxix music which has harmonized and built them into that unity which is the highest and last demand of Art. ... It [Comus] settled Milton's rank as a poet among all men capable of judging. Sir Henry Wotton's voice was, we may be sure, the voice of all men of culture : — "A dainty piece of entertainment, wherein I should much com- mend the tragical part if the lyrical did not ravish me with a certain Doric delicacy in your songs and odes, whereunto I must plainly confess to have seen yet nothing parallel in our language." The phrase Doric delicacy is not ill-said ; but it is not in the lyrics, which are excelled by many of the Elizabethan lyrics, but in the full-weighted dignity of the blank verse that the poem was then un- paralleled. Moreover it was marked by a greater gran- deur of style and thought, by a graver beauty, and by a more exercised and self-conscious art than any poem of its character which England had as yet known. It be- longed to the Elizabethan spirit, but it went beyond it and made a new departure for English poetry. The way it showed could not be walked in by the men of the Restoration and the Revolution. It was before its time ; but that is at once the good and the evil fortune of a great genius. Johnson's sturdy criticism on it has much force and is admirably written ; but in condemning it as a drama, he is carried beyond good sense to lose sight of its beauty as a poem. Moreover his arrows do not hit the target. Comus is not a regular drama, but a masque, and a masque obeys laws distinct from those of the regular drama. The masque depends for success not only on the poetry, which here is splendid, but also and chiefly on its occasion, and away XXX INTR OD UC TION. from the occasion its dramatic fitness cannot be judged. It depends also on the decoration and music, and these are so knit to the occasion that, even when they are reproduced, they have not the same value as at the time they were first made. No one can judge how far Comns contradicts Johnson's judgment of its want of interest as a dramatic representation, unless he can recreate in his mind not only the scene, and the "occasion," and all its interests, but also all the feelings of the spectators, and the thought of the story in their minds to which the masque spoke ; and this was work of which Johnson at least seems incapable. Comus was written for such an occasion, and only in the atmosphere of the moment can its dramatic merits be judged. Still that Comus soars beyond the occasion is plain enough. It displaced itself as a masque to rise into a poem to the glory and victory of virtue. And its virtue lies in the mastery of the righteous will over sense and appetite. It is a song to Temperance as the ground of freedom, to temperance as the guard of all the virtues, to beauty as secured by temperance, and its central point and climax is in the pleading of these motives by the Lady against their opposites in the mouth of the Lord of sensual Revel. It is moreover raised above an ethical poem by its imaginative form and power ; and its literary worth enables us to consider it, if we choose, apart from its dramatic form. Its imagination, however, sinks at times, and one can scarcely explain this otherwise than by saying that the Elizabethan habit of fantastic metaphor clung to Milton at this time. When he does fall, the fall is made more remarkable by the soaring strength of his loftier flight and by the majesty of the verse. Nothing can be worse in conception than the comparison of night to a thief who INTRODUCTION. xxxi shuts up, for the sake of his felony, the stars whose lamps burn everlasting oil, in his dark lantern. The better it is carried out and the finer the verse, the worse it is. And yet it is instantly followed by the great passage about the fears of night, the fantasies and airy tongues that syllable men's names, and by the glorious appeal to conscience, faith, and God, followed in its turn by the fantastic conceit of the cloud that turns out its silver lining on the night. This is Elizabethan weakness and strength, the mixture of gold and clay, the want of that art-sensitiveness which feels the absurd : and Milton, even in Paradise Lost, when he had got further from his originals, falls into it not unfrequently. It is a fault which runs through a good deal of his earlier work, it is more seen in Comns than elsewhere ; but it was the fault of that poetic age. f It \_Lycidas~\ is pastoral, and in the form of other 'pastorals ; with its introduction and its epilogue, and between them the monody of the shepherd who has lost his friend. Under the guise of one shepherd mourning another, all Milton's relations with Edward King are expressed, and all his thoughts about his character and genius ; and the poem, to be justly judged, must be read with the conditions of the pastoral as a form of verse pres- ent to the mind. That is enough to dispose of Johnson's unfavourable criticism, which quarrels with the poem for its want of passion and want of nature, and for its improb- ability. It is not a poem of passionate sorrow, but of admi- ration and regret expressed with careful art and in a special artistic form ; and the classical allusions and shepherd images and the rest are the necessary drapery of the pastoral, the art of which, and the due keeping to form in xxxil 1NTR OD UC TION. which, are as important to Milton, and perhaps more so, than his regret. We are made aware of this when we find Milton twice checking himself in the conduct of the poem for having gone beyond the limits of the pastoral. The metrical structure, which is partly borrowed from Italian models, is as carefully wrought as the rest, and harmonized to the thoughts. " Milton's ear was a good second to his imagination." Lycidas appeals not only to the imagination, but to the educated imagination. There is no ebb and flow of poetical power as in Comus ; it is an advance on all his previous work, and it fitly closes the poetic labour of his youth. It is needless to analyse it, and all criticism is weaker than the poem itself. Yet we may say that one of its strange charms is its solemn under- tone rising like a religious chaunt through the elegiac musick ; the sense of a stern national crisis in the midst of its pastoral mourning ; the sense of Milton's grave force of character among the flowers and fancies of the poem ; the sense of the Christian religion pervading the classical imagery. We" might say that these things are ill-fitted to each other. So they would be, were not the art so fine and the poetry so over-mastering ; were they not fused together by genius into a whole so that the unfitness itself becomes fascination. 1 [Saintsbury, Elizabethan Literature, pp. 319-322.] This body of work, then, is marked by two qualities : an extraordinary degree of poetic merit, and a still more extraordinary originality of poetic kind. Although Milton is always Milton, it would be difficult to find in another 1 See also pp. 27-29, where Brooke gives his observations on the political and social aspects of Milton's early poetry. INTRODUCTION. xxxiii writer five poems, or (taking the Allegro and its companion together) four, so different from each other and yet of such high merit. And it would be still more difficult to find poems so independent in their excellence. Neither the influence of Johnson nor the influence of Donne — the two poetical influences in the air at the time, and the lat- ter especially strong at Cambridge — produced even the faintest effect on Milton. We know from his own words, and should have known even if he had not mentioned it, that Shakespere and Spenser were his favourite studies in English ; yet, save in mere scattered phrases, none of these poems owes anything to either. He has teachers but no models ; masters, but only in the way of learning how to do, not what to do. The " certain vital marks," of which he somewhat arrogantly speaks, are indeed there. ... As for L Allegro and // Penseroso, who shall praise them fitly ? [They are among the few things about which there is no (difference of opinion, which are as delightful to child- hood as to criticism, to youth as to age. To dwell on their technical excellences (the chief of whkm is the unerr- ing precision with which the catalectic and acatalectic lines are arranged and interchanged) has a certain air of impertinence about it. Even a critical King Alfonso El Sabio could hardly think it possible that Milton might have taken a hint here, although some persons have, it seems, been disturbed because skylarks do not come to the window, just as others are troubled because the flowers in Lycidas do not grow at the same time, and because they think they could see stars through the "starproof" trees of Arcades. . . . But it is in Comus that, if I have any skill of criti- cism, Milton's poetical power is at its greatest height. Those who judge poetry on the ground of bulk, or of origi- xxxiv INTRODUCTION. nality of theme, or of anything else extra-poetical, — much more those (the greater number) who simply vary trans- mitted ideas, — may be scandalized at this assertion, but that will hardly matter much. And indeed the indebtedness of Comus in point of subject (it is probably limited to the Odyssey, which is public property, and to George Peele's Old Wives' Tale, which gave little but a few hints of story) is scarcely greater than that of Paradise Lost ; while the form of the drama, a kind nearly as venerable and majestic as that of the epic, is completely filled. And in Comus there is none of the stiffness, none of the longueurs, none of the almost ludicrous want of humour, which mar the larger poem. Humour indeed was what Milton always lacked ; had he had it, Shakespere himself might hardly have been greater. The plan is not really more artificial than that of the epic ; though in the latter case it is masked to us by the scale, by the grandeur of the personages, and by the familiarity of the images to all men who have been brought up on the Bible. The versification, as even Johnson saw, is the versification of Paradise Lost, and to my fancy at any rate it has a spring, a variety, a sweep and rush of genius, which are but rarely present later. As for its beauty in parts, quis vituperavit ? It is impossible to single out passages, for the whole is golden. The enter- ing address of Comus, the song "Sweet Echo," the descrip- tive speech of the Spirit, and the magnificent eulogy of the " sun-clad power of chastity," would be the most beautiful things where all is beautiful, if the unapproachable " Sabrina fair " did not come later, and were not sustained before and after, for nearly two hundred lines of pure nectar. If poetry could be taught by the reading of it, then indeed the critic's advice to a poet might be limited to this : "Give your days and nights to the reading of Comus." INTRODUCTION. xxxv [William Hazlitt, Lectures on the English Poets, Appendix, p. 201 etseqX\ Of all Milton's smaller poems, Lycidas is the greatest favourite with me. I cannot agree to the charge which Dr. Johnson has brought against it of pedantry and want of feeling. It is the fine emanation of classical sentiment in a youthful scholar — 'most musical, most melancholy.' A certain tender gloom overspreads it, a wayward abstrac- tion, a forgetfulness of his subject in the serious reflections that arise out of it. The gusts of passion come and go like the sounds of music borne on the wind. The loss of the friend whose death he laments seems to have recalled, with double force, the reality of those speculations which they had indulged together ; we are transported to classic ground, and a mysterious strain steals responsive on the ear, while we listen to the poet, ' With eager thought warbling his Doric lay.' I shall proceed to give a few passages at length in support of my opinion. The first I shall quote is as remarkable for the truth and sweetness of the natural descriptions as for the characteristic elegance of the allusions. [Lines 25-49 quoted.] After the fine apostrophe on Fame which Phoebus is in- volved to utter, the poet proceeds: [Lines 85-99 quoted.] If this is art, it is perfect art ; nor do we wish for anything better. The measure of the verse, the very sound of the names, would almost produce the effect here described. To ask the poet not to make use of such allusions as these is to ask the painter not to dip in the colours of the rainbow, if he could. — In fact, it is the com- mon cant of criticism to consider every allusion to the clas- 1 New York, 1845. Wiley and Putnam. xxxvi INTRODUCTION. sics, and particularly in a mind like Milton's, as pedantry and affectation. Habit is a second nature ; and, in this sense, the pedantry (if it is to be so called) of the scholastic enthusiast, who is constantly referring to images of which his mind is full, is as graceful as it is natural. It is not affectation in him to recur to ideas and modes of expres- sion with which he has the strongest associations, and in which he takes the greatest delight. Milton was as conver- sant with the world of genius before him as with the world of nature about him ; the fables of the ancient mythology were as familiar to him as his dreams. To be a pedant is to see neither the beauties of nature nor of art. Milton saw both ; and he made use of the one only to adorn and give interest to the other. He was a passionate admirer of nature ; and, in a single couplet of his, describing the moon, — ' Like one that had been led astray Through the heaven's wide pathless way,' — there is more intense observation, and intense feeling of nature (as if he had gazed himself blind in looking at her,) than in twenty volumes of descriptive poetry. But he added in his own observation of nature the splendid fictions of ancient genius, enshrined her in the mysteries of ancient religion, and celebrated her with the pomp of ancient names. 1 [Dowden, Transcripts and Studies, pp. 460-465, 473-] . . . Milton, as an artist, works in the manner of an idealist. His starting-point is ordinarily an abstraction. Whereas with Bunyan abstract virtues and vices are per- 1 Hazlitt continues with a rather fanciful defense of Milton's com- bination of heathen and Christian elements. INTRODUCTION. xxxvii petually tending to become real persons, with Milton each real person tends to become the representative of an idea or a group, more or less complex, of ideas. . . . Comus is the work of a youthful spirit, enamoured of its ideals of beauty and of virtue, zealous to exhibit the identity of moral loveliness with moral severity. The real incident from which the mask is said to have originated disengages itself, in the imagination of Milton, from the world of actual occurrences, and becomes an occasion for the dramatic display of his own poetical abstractions. The young English gentlemen cast off their identity and individuality, and appear in the elementary shapes of "First Brother" and "Second Brother." The Lady Alice rises into an ideal impersonation of virgin strength and virtue. The scene is earth, a wild wood ; but earth, as in all the poems of Milton, with the heavens arching over it — a dim spot, in which men " strive to keep up a frail and feverish being " set below the " starry threshold of Jove's Court," " Where those immortal shapes Of bright aerial spirits live inspher'd In regions mild of calm and serene air." From its first scene to the last the drama is a represen- tation of the trials, difficulties, and dangers to which moral purity is exposed in this world, and of the victory of the better principle in the soul, gained by strenuous human endeavour aided by the grace of God. In this spiritual warfare the powers of good and evil are arrayed against one another ; upon this side the Lady, her brothers (types of human helpfulness weak in itself, and liable to go astray), and the supernatural powers auxiliar to virtue in heaven and in earth — the Attendant Spirit and the nymph Sabrina. xxxviii INTRODUCTION. The enchanter Comus is son of Bacchus and Circe, and inheritor of twofold vice. If Milton had pictured the life of innocent mirth in U Allegro, here was a picture to set beside the other, a vision of the genius of sensual indul- gence. Yet Comus is inwardly, not outwardly foul ; no grim monster like that which the medieval imagination conjured up to terrify the spirit and disgust the senses. The attempt of sin upon the soul as conceived by Milton is not the open and violent obsession of a brute power, but involves a cheat, an imposture. The soul is put upon its trial through the seduction of the senses and the lower parts of our nature. Flattering lies entice the ears of Eve; Christ is tried by false visions of power and glory, and beneficent rule ; Samson is defrauded of his strength by deceitful blandishment. And in like manner Comus must needs possess a beauty of his own, such beauty as ensnares the eye untrained in the severe school of moral perfection. Correggio sought him as a favourite model, but not Michael Angelo. He is sensitive to rich forms and sweet sounds, graceful in oratory, possessed, like Satan, of high intellect, but intellect in the service of the senses ; he surrounds himself with a world of art which lulls the soul into forget- fulness of its higher instincts and of duty; his palace is stately, and " set out with all manner of deliciousness." Over against this potent enchanter stands the original figure of the Lady, who is stronger than he. Young men, themselves conscious of high powers, and who are more truly acquainted with admiration than with love, find the presence of strength in woman invincibly attractive. Shakspere, in his earlier dramatic period, delighted to represent such characters as Rosalind, and Beatrice, and Portia ; characters at once stronger and weaker than his Imogens and Desdemonas, — stronger because more intel- INTRODUCTION. xxxix lectual, weaker because less harmoniously feminine. Shelley, who was never other than young, exhibited different types of heroic womanly nature, as conceived by him, in Cythna of The Revolt of Islam, and in Beatrice Cenci. Something of weakness belongs to the Lady of Milton's poem, because she is a woman, accustomed to the protection of others, tenderly nurtured, with a fair and gentle body ; but when the hour of trial comes she shows herself strong in powers of judgment and of reasoning, strong in her spiritual nature, in her tenacity of moral truth, in her indignation against sin. Although alone, and encompassed by evil and danger, she is fearless, and so clear-sighted that the juggling practice of her antagonist is wholly ineffectual against her. There is much in the Lady which resembles the youthful Milton himself — he, the Lady of his college — and we may well believe that the great debate concerning temperance was not altogether dramatic (where, indeed, is Milton truly dramatic ?), but was in part a record of passages in the poet's own spiritual history. Milton admired the Lady as he admired the ideal which he projected before him of himself. She is, indeed, too admirable to be an object of cherishing love. We could almost prolong her sufferings to draw a more complete enthusiasm from the sight of her heroic attitude. The Lady is unsubdued, and indeed unsubduable, because her will remains her own, a citadel without a breach ; but "her corporeal rind" is manacled, she is set in the enchanted chair and cannot leave it. . . . Meanwhile . . . the brothers wander in the wood. They are alike in being aimless and helpless ; if they are distinguished from each other, it is only as " First Brother " and "Second Brother," and by one of the simple devices common to ideal artists — first brother is a philosopher and full of hope xl INTRODUCTION. and faith ; second brother is more apprehensive, and less thoroughly grounded in ethics and metaphysics. The deliverance of their sister would be impossible but for supernatural interposition, the aid afforded by the Attendant Spirit from Jove's court. In other words, Divine Provi- dence is asserted.' Not without higher than human aid is the Lady rescued, and through the weakness of the mortal instruments of divine grace but half the intended work is accomplished. Comus escapes bearing his magic wand, to deceive other strayers in the wood, to work new enchant- ments, and swell his rout of ugly-headed followers. # # # * # ... A line will recapitulate the substance of this essay. Milton works from the starting-point of an idea, and two such ideas brought into being what he accomplished as a man and as an artist. His prose works, the outcome of his life of public action, have for their ideal centre a conception of human liberty. His poetical works, the out- come of his inner life, his life of artistic contemplation, are various renderings of one dominant idea — that the struggle for mastery between good and evil is the prime fact of life ; and that a final victory of the righteous cause is assured by the existence of a divine order of the universe, which Milton knew by the name of " Providence." [J. C. Shairp, On Poetic Interpretation of Nature, pp. 186-190. 1 ] When we pass from the images of Nature that abound in Chaucer and in Shakespeare to those which Milton 1 For a bibliography of Literature on the Nature-Sense, see Camillo Von Klenze's article in the Journal of Germanic Philology, vol. ii. pp. 239-265; also, The Critic, vol. xxviii. (new series) pp. 47, 118. On Milton's treatment of nature, see Mr. Squires's article in the Mod. Lang. INTR OD UC TION. xl i furnishes, the transition is much the same as when we pass from the scenery of Homer to that of Virgil. The contrast is that between natural free-flowing poetry, in which the beauty is child-like and unconscious, and highly cultured artistic poetry, which produces its effects through a medium of learned illustration, ornate coloring, and stately diction. In the one case Nature is seen directly and at first hand, with nothing between the poet and the object except the imaginative emotion under which he works. In the other, Nature is apprehended only in her 'second intention,' as logicians speak, only as she appears through a beautiful haze, compounded of learning, associa- tions of the past, and carefully selected artistic colors. With Milton, Nature was not his first love, but held only a secondary place in his affections. He was in the first place a scholar, a man of letters, with the theologian and polemic latent in him. A lover of all artistic beauty he was, no doubt, and of Nature mainly as it lends itself to this perception. And as is his mode of apprehending Nature, such is the language in which he describes her. When he reached his full maturity he had framed for him- self out of the richness of his genius and the resources of his learning a style elaborate and splendid, so that he stands unique among English poets, ' our one first-rate master in the grand style.' As an eminent living French writer says, — * For rendering things he has the unique word, the word which is a discovery,' and ' he has not only the image and the word, he has the period also, the large musical phrase, somewhat laden with ornaments and intricate with inversions, but bearing all along with it in Notes, vol. ix. pp. 227-237, where Mr. Squires comes to the conclusion that Milton in the main looked at nature " through the spectacles of books." xlii INTR OD UC TION. its superb undulation. Above all, he has something inde- scribably serene and victorious, an unfailing level of style, power indomitable.' This admirable description of M. Scherer applies mainly to Milton's style, as it was fully elaborated in his great epic. And the thought has some- times occurred, whether this magnificently elaborated style can be a fit vehicle for rendering truly the simplicity, the refreshingness of Nature, — whether the poet's art, from its very opulence, must not color too much the clearness and transparency of the external world. However this may be, it is certain that it is not to his maturer poems, with their grandeur of style, that we look for his most vivid render- ings of scenery, but to those early poems, which had more native grace of diction and less of artistic elaboration. Nowhere has Milton shown such an eye for scenery as in those first poems, 'L'Allegro,' 'II Penseroso,' 'Lycidas,' and 'Comus,' composed before he was thirty, just after leaving Cambridge, while he was living under his father's roof at Horton, in Buckinghamshire. During the five years of country life, the most genial of all his years, amid his incessant study of the Greek and Latin poets, and other self-improvement, his heart was perhaps more open than at any other time to the moral beauty which lay around him. < Comus ' and < Lycidas ' both contain fine natural imagery, yet somewhat deflected by the artistic framework in which it is set. In the latter poem, in which Milton, adopting the idyllic form of Virgil, fills it with a mightier power, classical allusion and mythology are strangely, yet not unharmoniously, blended with pictures taken from English landscape. Every one remembers the splendid grouping of flowers which he there broiders in. Of this catalogue it has been observed that, beautiful as it is, it violates the truth of nature, as it places side by side flowers INTRODUCTION. xliii of different seasons which are never seen flowering together. It is in his two ' descriptive Lyrics ' that we find the clear- est proofs of an eye that had observed Nature at first hand and for itself. In the poem descriptive of mirth, it has been observed that the mirth is of a very sedate kind, not reaching beyond a 'trim and stately cheerfulness.' The mythological pedigrees attached both to mirth and to melan- choly strike us now as somewhat strange, if not frigid ; but, with this allowance, Milton's richly sensuous imagination bodies forth the cheerfulness, as he wished to portray it, in a succession of images unsurpassed for beauty. In the lines descriptive of these images, Art and Nature appear perhaps more than in any other of Milton's poems in perfect equipoise. The images selected are the aptest vehicles of the sentiment ; the language in which they are expressed is of the most graceful and musical ; while the natural objects themselves are seen at first hand, set down with their edges still sharp, and uncolored by any tinge of bookish allusion. Aspects of English scenery, one after another, occur, which he was the first poet to note, and which none since could dare to touch, so entirely has he made them his own. The mower whetting his scythe, — who ever hears that sound coming from the lawn in the morning without thinking of Milton ? ' The tanned hay- cock in the mead ; ' the cottage chimney smoking betwixt two aged oaks ; the moon ' As if her head she bowed, Stooping through a fleecy cloud ; ' the shower pattering ' On the ruffling leaves, With minute drops from off the eaves ; ' xl i v INTR OD UC TION. the great curfew-bell heard swinging ' over some wide watered shore ; ' — these are all images taken straight from English landscape which Milton has forever enshrined in his two matchless poems. Of these two poems, describing the bright and the thoughtful aspects of Nature, my friend Mr. Palgrave, 1 in his exquisite collection of English Lyrics, ( The Golden Treasury,' has observed that these are the earliest pure descriptive lyrics in our language, adding that it is a strik- ing proof of Milton's astonishing power that these are still the best, in a style which so many great poets have since his time attempted. [Walter Bagehot, Litera?y Studies, vol. ii. pp. 201-204.] If from the man we turn to his works, we are struck at once with two singular contrasts. The first of them is this. The distinction between ancient and modern art is sometimes said, and perhaps truly, to consist in the simple bareness of the imaginative conceptions which we find in ancient art, and the comparative complex clothing in which all modern creations are embodied. If we adopt this dis- tinction, Milton seems in some sort ancient, and in some 1 Mr. Palgrave's most recent criticism of these poems is to be found in his Landscape in Poetry, pp. 1 58-1 59. He there says that " V Allegro and 77 Penseroso, the earliest great lyrics of the landscape in our lan- guage, despite all later competition still remain supreme for range, variety, lucidity, and melodious charm within their style. And this style is essentially that of the Greek and the earlier English poets, but enlarged to the conception of whole scenes from Nature ; occasionally even panoramic. External images are set simply and impersonally before us, although selected and united in sentiment accordantly with the gay or the meditative mood of the supposed spectator." As to whether the poems may be called " pure descriptive lyrics," see Gummere, Handbook of Poetics, p. 48. INTRODUCTION. xlv sort modern. Nothing is so simple as the subject-matter of his works. The two greatest of his creations, the character of Satan and the character of Eve, are two of the simplest — the latter probably the very simplest — in the whole field of literature. On this side Milton's art is classical. On the other hand, in no writer is the imagery more pro- fuse, the illustrations more various, the dress altogether more splendid. And in this respect the style of his art seems romantic and modern. In real truth, however, it is only ancient art in a modern disguise. The dress is a mere dress, and can be stripped off when we will. We all of us do perhaps in memory strip it off ourselves. Not- withstanding the lavish adornments with which her image is presented, the character of Eve is still the simplest sort of feminine essence — the pure embodiment of that inner nature, which we believe and hope that women have. The character of Satan, though it is not so easily de- scribed, has nearly as few elements in it. The most purely modern conceptions will not bear to be unclothed in this matter. Their romantic garment clings inseparably to them. Hamlet and Lear are not to be thought of except as complex characters, with very involved and complicated embodiments. They are as difficult to draw out in words as the common characters of life are ; that of Hamlet, perhaps, is more so. If we make it, as perhaps we should, the characteristic of modern and romantic art that it pre- sents us with creations which we cannot think of or deline- ate except as very varied, and, so to say, circumstantial, we must not rank Milton among the masters of romantic art. And without involving the subject in the troubled sea of an old controversy, we may say that the most striking of the poetical peculiarities of Milton is the bare simplicity of his ideas, and the rich abundance of his illustrations. xlvi INTRODUCTION. Another of his peculiarities is equally striking. There seems to be such a thing as second-hand poetry. Some poets, musing on the poetry of other men, have uncon- sciously shaped it into something of their own : the new conception is like the original, it would never probably have existed had not the original existed previously ; still it is sufficiently different from the original to be a new thing, not a copy or a plagiarism ; it is a creation, though, so to say, a suggested creation. Gray is as good an example as can be found of a poet whose works abound in this species of semi-original conceptions. Industri- ous critics track his best lines back, and find others like them which doubtless lingered near his fancy while he was writing them. The same critics have been equally busy with the works of Milton, and equally successful. They find traces of his reading in half his works ; not, which any reader could do, in overt similes and distinct illustra- tions, but also in the very texture of the thought and the expression. In many cases, doubtless, they discover more than he himself knew. A mind like his, which has an immense store of imaginative recollections, can never know which of his own imaginations is exactly suggested by which recollection. Men awake with their best ideas ; it is seldom worth while to investigate very curiously whence they came. Our proper business is to adapt, and mould, and act upon them. Of poets perhaps this is true even more remarkably than of other men ; their ideas are suggested in modes, and according to laws, which are even more impossible to specify than the ideas of the rest of the world. Second-hand poetry, so to say, often seems quite original to the poet himself ; he frequently does not know that he derived it from an old memory ; years afterwards it may strike him as it does others. Still, in general, such INTRODUCTION. xlvii inferior species of creation is not so likely to be found in minds of singular originality as in those of less. A brood- ing, placid, cultivated mind, like that of Gray, is the place where we should expect to meet with it. Great originality disturbs the adaptive process, removes the mind of the poet from the thoughts of other men, and occupies it with its own heated and flashing thoughts. Poetry of the second degree is like the secondary rocks of modern geol- ogy — a still, gentle, alluvial formation ; the igneous glow of primary genius brings forth ideas like the primeval granite, simple, astounding, and alone. Milton's case is an exception to this rule. His mind has marked origi- nality, probably as much of it as any in literature ; but it has as much of moulded recollection as any mind too. His poetry in consequence is like an artificial park, green, and soft, and beautiful, yet with outlines bold, distinct, and firm, and the eternal rock ever jutting out ; or, better still, it is like our own Lake scenery, where Nature has herself the same combination — where we have Rydal Water side by side with the everlasting upheaved mountain. Milton has the same union of softened beauty with unimpaired grandeur ; and it is his peculiarity. These are the two contrasts which puzzle us at first in Milton, and which distinguish him from other poets of our remembrance afterwards. We have a superficial com- plexity in illustration, and imagery, and metaphor ; and in contrast with it we observe a latent simplicity of idea, an almost rude strength of conception. The underlying thoughts are few, though the flowers on the surface are so many. We have likewise the perpetual contrast of the soft poetry of the memory, and the firm, as it were fused, and glowing poetry of the imagination. His words, we may half fancifully say, are like his character. There is the xl viii INTR OD UC TION. same austerity in the real essence, the same exquisiteness of sense, the same delicacy of form which we know that he had, the same music which we imagine there was in his voice. In both his character and his poetry there was an ascetic nature in a sheath of beauty. [Arnold, Essays in Criticism, Second Series, pp. 63-66. 1 ] That Milton, of all our English race, is by his diction and rhythm the one artist of the highest rank in the great style whom we have ; this I take as requiring no discussion, this I take as certain. The mighty power of poetry and art is generally ad- mitted. But where the soul of this power, of this power at its best, chiefly resides, very many of us fail to see. It resides chiefly in the refining and elevation wrought in us by the high and rare excellence of the great style. We may feel the effect without being able to give ourselves clear account of its cause, but the thing is so. Now, no race needs the influences mentioned, the influences of re- fining and elevation, more than ours ; and in poetry and art our grand source for them is Milton. To what does he owe this supreme distinction ? To nature first and foremost, to that bent of nature for in- equality which to the worshippers of the average man is so unacceptable ; to a gift, a divine favour. ' The older one grows,' says Goethe, ' the more one prizes natural gifts, because by no possibility can they be procured and stuck on.' Nature formed Milton to be a great poet. But what other poet has shown so sincere a sense of the grandeur of his vocation, and a moral effort so constant and sublime 1 Arnold writes in a similar strain in the latter part of his essay entitled A French Critic on Milton, in Mixed Essays, pp. 237-273. INTRODUCTION. xlix to make and keep himself worthy of it ? The Milton of religious and political controversy, and perhaps of domestic life also, is not seldom disfigured by want of amenity, by acerbity. The Milton of poetry, on the other hand, is one of those great men ' who are modest ' — to quote a fine remark of Leopardi, that gifted and stricken young Italian, who in his sense for poetic style is worthy to be named with Dante and Milton — 'who are modest, because they continually compare themselves, not with other men, but with that idea of the perfect which they have before their mind.' The Milton of poetry is the man, in his own mag- nificent phrase, of 'devout prayer to that Eternal Spirit that can enrich with all utterance and knowledge, and sends out his Seraphim with the hallowed fire of his altar, to touch and purify the lips of whom he pleases.' And finally, the Milton of poetry is, in his own words again, the man of 'industrious and select reading.' Continually he lived in companionship with high and rare excellence, with the great Hebrew poets and prophets, with the great poets of Greece and Rome. The Hebrew compositions were not in verse, and can be not inadequately represented by the grand, measured prose of our English Bible. The verse of the poets of Greece and Rome no translation can adequately reproduce. Prose cannot have the power of verse ; verse- translation may give whatever of charm is in the soul and talent of the translator himself, but never the specific charm of the verse and poet translated. In our race are thousands of readers, presently there will be millions, who know not a word of Greek and Latin, and will never learn those languages. If this host of readers are ever to gain any sense of the power and charm of the great poets of antiquity, their way to gain it is not through translations of the ancients, but through the original poetry of Milton, 1 INTRODUCTION. who has the like power and charm, because he has the like great style. TENNYSON'S SONNET TO MILTON. O mighty-mouth'd inventor of harmonies, O skill'd to sing of Time or Eternity, God-gifted organ-voice of England, Milton, a name to resound for ages ; Whose Titan angels, Gabriel, Abdiel, Starred from Jehovah's gorgeous armouries. Tower, as the deep-domed empyrean Rings to the roar of an angel onset — Me rather all that bowery loneliness, The brooks of Eden mazily murmuring, And bloom profuse and cedar arches Charm, as a wanderer out in ocean, Where some refulgent sunset of India Streams o'er a rich ambrosial ocean isle, And crimson-hued the stately palm-woods Whisper in odorous heights of even. II. BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE. So much has been written about Milton that only the best can be mentioned here. The Poetical Wo?'ks of Johti Milton (Macmillan), in three volumes, edited by Professor David Masson, is the standard edition of Milton's poetry. The Globe edition (Macmillan), also edited by Professor Masson, contains the poetical works in one volume, and should be in the hands of every student. Of recent annotated editions, those of Verity and Browne may be INTRODUCTION. li specially mentioned. The other important editions, from Newton's down, are referred to or quoted in the notes to the present volume. At least as much of Milton's prose should be read as is contained in Morley's English Prose Writings of John Milton (Routledge), if the student has not the time or the inclination to read through the five volumes in the Bohn library. Professor Masson's Life of John Milton (Macmillan), in six volumes, is the authoritative biography, although Brooke's Milton (Appleton), Pattison's Milton (Harper), or Garnett's John Milton (Walter Scott), the latter of which has a good bibliography, will better answer the needs of the ordinary student. Besides the authors quoted in the Introduction to the present volume, whose criticisms should be read in their complete form, Addison, Johnson, Coleridge, Macaulay, Landor, Emerson, Lowell, and others of less note have made contributions of more or less value to Miltonic criti- cism. The student will find Bradshaw's Concordance to the Poetical Works (Macmillan) also of value ; for the history of Milton's time, he may consult Green's Short History of the English People (Harper), and Gardiner's Puritan Revo- lution (Longmans). L'ALLEGRO, IL PENSEROSO, COMUS, AND LYCIDAS. L'ALLEGRO. Hence, loathed Melancholy, Of Cerberus and blackest Midnight born In Stygian cave forlorn 'Mongst horrid shapes, and shrieks, and sights unholy ! Find out some uncouth cell, Where brooding Darkness spreads his jealous wings, And the night-raven sings ; There, under ebon shades and low-browed rocks, As ragged as thy locks, In dark Cimmerian desert ever dwell. 10 But come, thou Goddess fair and free, In heaven yclept Euphrosyne, And by men heart- easing Mirth ; Whom lovely Venus, at a birth, With two sister Graces more, To ivy- crowned Bacchus bore : Or whether (as some sager sing) The frolic wind that breathes the spring, Zephyr, with Aurora playing, As he met her once a-Maying, VALLEGRO. There, on beds of violets blue, And fresh-blown roses washed in dew, Filled her with thee, a daughter fair, So buxom, blithe, and debonair. Haste thee, Nymph, and bring with thee Jest, and youthful Jollity, Quips and cranks and wanton wiles, *~ Nods and becks and wreathed smiles Such as hang on Hebe's cheek, And love to live in dimple sleeky 30 j / . Sport that wrinkled Care derides, And Laughter holding both his sides. Come, and trip it, as you go, On the light fantastic toe ; And in thy right hand lead with thee The mountain-nymph, sweet Liberty ; f ^.And, if I give thee honour due, Mirth, admit me of thy crew, To live with her, and live with thee, I In unreproved pleasures free : J To hear the lark begin his flight, 40 And, singing, startle the dull night, From his watch-tower in the skies, Till the dappled dawn doth rise ; Then to come, in spite of sorrow, And at my window bid good-morrow, Through the sweet-briar or the vine, Or the twisted eglantine ; While the cock, with lively din, Scatters the rear of darkness thin, 50 And to the stack, or the barn-door, V ALLEGRO. 3 Stoutly struts his dames before : Oft listening how the hounds and horn Cheerly rouse the slumbering morn, From the side of some hoar hill, Through the high wood echoing shrill : Sometime walking, not unseen, By hedgerow elms, on hillocks green, Right against the eastern gate Where the great Sun, begins his state, 60 Robed in flames and amber light, The clouds in thousand liveries dight ; While the ploughman, near at hand, Whistles o'er the furrowed land, And the milkmaid singeth blithe, And the mower whets his scythe, And every shepherd tells his tale Under the hawthorn in the dale. ^Straight mine eye hath caught new pleasures, ' Whilst the landskip. round it measures : 70 Russet lawns, and fallows grey,^^ Where the nibbling flocks do stray ; Mountains on whose barren breast The labouring clouds do often rest ; Meadows trim, with daisies pied ; Shallow brooks, and rivers wide ; Towers and battlements it sees Bosomed high in tufted trees, Where perhaps some beauty lies, ^~-j The cynosure of neighbouring e yes. i\ 80 Hard by a cottage chimney smokes From betwixt two aged oaks, \S VALLEGRO. Where Corydon and Thyrsis met Are at their savoury dinner set Of herbs and other country messes, Which the neat-handed Phyllis dresses ; And then in Jiaste her bower she leaves, With Thestylis to bind the sheaves ; Or, if the earlier season lead, To the tanned haycock in the mead. 90 Sometimes, with secure delight, The upland hamlets will invite, When the merry bells ring round, And the jocund rebecks sound To many a youth and many a maid Dancing in the chequered shade, And young and old come forth to play On a sunshine holiday, Till the livelong daylight fail :i Then to the spicy nut-brown ale, 100 With stories told of many a feat, How Faery Mab the junkets eat. She was pinched and pulled, she said ; And he, by Friar's lantern led, Tells how the drudging goblin sweat To earn his cream-bowl duly set, When in one night, ere glimpse of morn, His shadowy flail hath threshed the corn That ten day-labourers could not end ; Then lies him down, the lubber fiend, no And, stretched out all the chimney's length, Basks at the fire his hairy strength, And crop-full out of doors he flings, VALLEGRO. 5 Ere the first cock his matin rings. Thus done the tales, to bed they creep, By whispering winds soon lulled asleep. Towered cities please us then, And the busy hum of men, Where throngs of knights and barons bold, In weeds of peace, high triumphs hold, 120 With store of ladies, whose bright eyes Rain influence, and judge the prize Of wit or arms, while both contend To win her grace whom all commend. There let Hymen oft appear In saffron robe, with taper clear, And pomp, and feast, and revelry, With mask and antique pageantry ; Such sights as youthful poets dream On summer eves by haunted stream. 130 Then to the well-trod stage anon, If Jonson's learned sock be on, Or sweetest Shakespeare, Fancy's child, Warble his native wood-notes wild. And ever, against eating cares, Lap me in soft Lydian airs, Married to immortal verse, Such as the meeting soul may pierce, In notes with many a winding bout Of linked sweetness long drawn out 140 With wanton heed and giddy cunning, The melting voice through mazes running, Untwisting all the chains that tie The hidden soul of harmony ; I V ALLEGRO. That Orpheus' self may heave his head From golden slumber on a bed Of heaped Elysian flowers, and hear Such strains as would have won the ear Of Pluto to have quite set free His half- regained Eurydice. 150 These delights if thou canst give, Mirth, with thee I mean to live. O <$ v IL PENSEROSO. Hence, vain deluding Joys, The brood of Folly without father bred ! How little you bested, Or fill the fixed mind with all your toys ! Dwell in some idle brain, And fancies fond with gaudy shapes possess, As thick and numberless As the gay motes that people the sun-beams, \ Or likest hovering dreams, The fickle pensioners of Morpheus' train. But/ hail ! thou Goddess sage and holy ! Hail, divinest Melancholy ! * ^vVhose saintly visage is too bright To hit the sense of human sight, And therefore to our weaker view O'erlaid with black, staid Wisdom's hue ; Black, but such as in esteem Prince Memnon's sister might beseem, Or that starred Ethiop queen that strove To set her beauty's praise above The Sea- Nymphs, and their powers offended. Yet thou art higher far descended : Thee bright-haired Vesta long of yore To solitary Saturn bore ; His daughter she ; in Saturn's reign Such mixture was not held a stain. 7 IL PENSEROSO. Oft in glimmering bowers and glades He met her, and in secret shades Of woody Ida's inmost grove, Whilst yet there was no fear of Jove. 30 Come, pensive Nun, devout "and pure, Sober, steadfast, and demure, All in a robe of darkest grain, Flowing with majestic train, And sable stole of cypress lawn Over thy decent shoulders drawn. Come ; but keep thy wonted state, With even step, and musing gait, And looks commercing with the skies, Thy rapt soul sitting in thine eyesjN 40 There, held in holy passion 'still, Forget thyself to marble, till With a sad leaden downward cast Thou fix them on the earth as fast. And join with thee calm Peace and Quiet, Spare Fast, that oft with gods doth diet, And hears the Muses in a ring Aye round about Jove's altar sing ; And add to these retired Leisure, That in trim gardens takes his pleasure ; 50 But, first and chief est, with thee bring Him that yon soars on golden wing, Guiding the fiery-wheeled throne, The Cherub Contemplation ; And the mute Silence hist along, 'Less Philomel will deign a song, In her sweetest saddest plight, IL PENSEROSO. 9 Smoothing the rugged brow of Night, While Cynthia checks her dragon yoke Gently o T 5 r the accustomed oak. 60 Sweet bird, that shunn'st the noise of folly, Most musical, most melancholy ! Thee, chauntress, oft the woods among I woo, to hear thy even-song ; And, missing thee, I walk unseen On the dry smooth-shaven green, * To behold the wandering moon, Riding near her highest noon, Like one that had been led astray Through the heaven's wide pathless way, 70 And oft, as if her head she bowed, Stooping through a fleecy cloud. Oft, on a plat of rising ground, I hear the far-off curfew sound, Over some wide-watered shore, Swinging slow with sullen roar ; Or, if the air will not permit, Some still removed place will fit, Where glowing embers through the room Teach light to counterfeit a gloom, 80 Far from all resort of mirth, Save the cricket on the hearth, Or the bellman's drowsy charm To bless the doors from nightly harm. Or let my lamp, at midnight hour, Be seen in some high lonely tower, Where I may oft outwatch the Bear^_ With thrice great Hermes, or unsphere 10 IL PENSEROSO. The spirit of Plato , to unfold What worlds or what vast regions hold 90 The immortal mind that hath forsook Her mansion in this fleshly nook ; And of those demons that are found In fire, air, flood, or underground, Whose power hath a true consent With planet or with element. Sometime let gorge ous Trage dy In sceptred pall come sweeping by, Presenting Thebes, or Pejogsl line, Or the tale of Troy divine, 100 Or what (though rare) of later age Ennobled hath the buskined stage. But, O sad Virgin ! that thy power Might raise Musaeus from his bower ; Or bid the soul of Orpheu s sing Such notes as, warbled to the string, Drew iron tears down Pluto's cheek, And made Hell grant what love did seek ; Or call up him that left half-told The story of Cambuscan bold, no Of Camball, and of Algarsife, And who had Canace to wife, That owned the virtuous ring and glass, * And of the wondrous horse of brass On which the Tartar king did ride ; And if aught else great bards beside In sage and solemn tunes have sung, Of turneys, and of trophies hung, Of forests, and enchantments drear, IL PENSEROSO. 11 Where more is meant than meets the ear. 120 Thus, Night, oft see me in thy pale career, Till civil-suited Morn appear, Not tricked and frounced, as she was wont With the Attic boy to hunt, But kerchieft in a comely cloud, While rocking winds are piping loud, Or ushered with a shower still, When the gust hath blown his fill, Ending on the rustling leaves, With minute-drops from off the eaves. 130 And, when the sun begins to fling His flaring beams, me, Goddess, bring To arched walks of twilight groves, And shadows brown, that Sylvan loves, Of pine, or monumental oak, Where the rude axe with heaved stroke Was never heard the nymphs to daunt, Or fright them from their hallowed haunt. There, in close covert, by some brook, Where no profaner eye may look, 140 Hide me from day's garish eye, While the bee with honeyed thigh, That at her flowery work doth sing, And the, waters murmuring, With such consort as they keep, Entice the dewy-feathered Sleep. And let some strange mysterious dream Wave at his wings, in airy stream Of lively portraiture displayed, Softly on my eyelids laid; 150 12 IL PENSEROSO. And, as I wake, sweet music breathe Above, about, or underneath, Sent by some Spirit to mortals good, Or the unseen Genius of the wood. But let my due feet never fail ' To walk the studious cloister^s pale, And love the high embowed roof, With antique pillars massy proof, And storied windows richly clight, Casting a dim religious light. 160 There let the pealing organ blow, To the full-voiced quire below, In service high and anthems clear, As may with sweetness, through mine ear, Dissolve me into ecstasies, And bring all Heaven before mine eyesj And may at last my weary age Find out the peaceful hermitage, The hairy gown and mossy cell, Where I may sit and rightly spell 170 Of every star that heaven doth shew, And every herb that sips the dew, Till old experience do attain To something like prophetic strain. These pleasures, Melancholy, give ; And I with thee will choose to live. COMUS. A Masque Presented at Ludlow Castle, 1634, before the Earl of Bridgewater, then President of Wales. THE PERSONS. The Attendant Spirit, afterwards in the habit of Thyrsis. Comus, with his Crew. The Lady. First Brother. Second Brother. Sabrina, the Nymph. The Chief Persons which presented were : — r The Lord Brackley; Mr. Thomas Egerton, his Brother; The Lady Alice Egerton. COMUS. The first Scene discovers a wild wood. The Attendant Spirit descends or enters. Before the starry threshold of Jove's court My mansion is, where those immortal shapes Of bright aerial spirits live insphered In regions mild of calm and serene air, Above the smoke and stir of this dim spot Which men call Earth, and, with low-thoughted care, Confined and pestered in this pinfold here, Strive to keep up a frail and feverish being, Unmindful of the crown that Virtue gives, After this mortal change, to her true servants 10 Amongst the enthroned gods on sainted seats. Yet some there be that by due steps aspire To lay their just hands on that golden key That opes the palace of eternity. To such my errand is ; and, but for such, I would not soil these pure ambrosial weeds With the rank vapours of this sin-worn mould. But to my task. Neptune, besides the sway Of every salt flood and each ebbing stream, • Took in by lot, 'twixt high and nether Jove, 20 Imperial rule of all the sea-girt isles That, like to rich and various gems, inlay The unadorned bosom of the deep ; 14 COM US. 15 Which he, to grace his tributary gods, By course commits to several government, And gives them leave to wear their sapphire crowns And wield their little tridents. But this Isle, The greatest and the best of all the main, He quarters to his blue-haired deities ; And all this tract that fronts the falling sun 30 A noble Peer of mickle trust and power Has in his charge, with tempered awe to guide An old and haughty nation, proud in arms : Where his fair offspring, nursed in princely lore, Are coming to attend their father's state, And new-intrusted sceptre. But their way Lies through the perplexed paths of this drear wood, The nodding horror of whose shady brows Threats the forlorn and wandering passenger ; And here their tender age might suffer peril, 40 But that, by quick command from sovran Jove, - I was despatched for their defence and guard : And listen why ; for I will tell you now What never yet was heard in tale or song, From old or modern bard, in hall or bower. Bacchus, that first from out the purple grape Crushed the sweet poison of misused wine, After the Tuscan mariners transformed, Coasting the Tyrrhene shore, as the winds listed, On Circe's island fell. (Who knows not Circe, 50 The daughter of the Sun, whose charmed cup Whoever tasted lost his upright shape, And downward fell into a grovelling swine ?) This Nymph, that gazed upon his clustering locks, 16 COMUS. With ivy berries wreathed, and his blithe youth, Had by him, ere he parted thence, a son Much like his father, but his mother more, Whom therefore she brought up, and Comus named : Who, ripe and frolic of his full-grown age, Roving the Celtic and Iberian fields, 60 At last betakes him to this ominous wood, And, in thick shelter of black shades imbowered, Excels his mother at her mighty art ; Offering to every weary traveller His orient liquor in a crystal glass, To quench the drouth of Phoebus ; which as they taste (For most do taste through fond intemperate thirst), Soon as the potion works, their human count'nance, The express resemblance of the gods, is changed Into some brutish form of wolf or bear, 70 Or ounce or tiger, hog, or bearded goat, All other parts remaining as they were. And they, so perfect is their misery, Not once perceive their foul disfigurement, But boast themselves more comely than before, And all their friends and native home forget, To roll with pleasure in a sensual sty. Therefore, when any favoured of high Jove Chances to pass through this adventurous glade, Swift as the sparkle of a glancing star 80 I shoot from heaven, to give him safe convoy, As now I do. But first I must put off These my sky- robes, spun out of Iris' woof, And take the weeds and likeness of a swain That to the service of this house belongs, ^° COMUS. 17 Who, with his soft pipe and smooth-dittied song, Well knows to still the wild winds when they roar| And hush the waving woods ; nor of less faith And in this office of his mountain watch Likeliest, and nearest to the present aid 90 Of this occasion. But I hear the tread Of hateful steps ; I must be viewless now. Comus enters, with a charming-rod in one hand, his glass in the other : with him a rout of monsters, headed like sundry sorts of wild beasts, but otherwise like men and women, their apparel glistering. They come in making a riotous and unruly noise, with torches in their hands. Comus. The star that bids the shepherd fold Now the top of heaven doth hold ; And the gilded car of day His glowing axle doth allay In the steep Atlantic stream ; And the slope sun his upward beam Shoots against the dusky pole, Pacing toward the other goal 100 Of his chamber in the east. Meanwhile, welcome joy and feast, Midnight shout and revelry, Tipsy dance and jollity. Braid your locks with rosy twine, Dropping odours, dropping wine. Rigour now is gorte to bed ; And Advice with scrupulous head, Strict Age, and sour Severity, With their grave saws, in slumber lie. no 18 COMUS. We, that are of purer fire, Imitate the starry quire, Who, in their nightly watchful spheres, Lead in swift round the months and years. The sounds and seas, with all their finny drove, Now to the moon in wavering morrice move ; And on the tawny sands and shelves Trip the pert fairies and the clapper elves. By dimpled brook and fountain-brim, The wood-nymphs, decked with daisies trim, 120 Their merry wakes and pastimes keep : What hath night to do with sleep ? Night hath better sweets to prove ; Venus now wakes, and wakens Love. Come, let us our rights begin ; 'Tis only daylight that makes sin, Which these dun shades will ne'er report. Hail, goddess of nocturnal sport, Dark-veiled Cotytto, to whom the secret flame Of midnight torches burns ! mysterious dame, ^130 That ne'er art called but when the dragon womb Of Stygian darkness spets her thickest gloom, And makes one blot of all the air ! Stay thy cloudy ebon chair, Wherein thou ridest with Hecat', and befriend Us thy vowed priests, till utmost end Of all thy dues be done, and none left out, Ere the blabbing eastern scout, The nice Morn on the Indian steep, From her cabined loop-hole peep, 140 And to the tell-tale Sun descry COMUS. 19 Our concealed solemnity. Come, knit hands, and beat the ground In a light fantastic round. The Measure. Break off, break off ! I feel the different pace Of some chaste footing near about this ground. Run to your shrouds within these brakes and trees ; Our number may affright. Some virgin sure (For so I can distinguish by mine art) Benighted in these woods ! Now to my charms, 150 And to my wily trains : I shall ere long Be well stocked with as fair a herd as grazed About my mother Circe. Thus I hurl My dazzling spells into the spongy air, Of power to cheat the eye with blear illusion, And give it false presentments, lest the place And my quaint habits breed astonishment, And put the damsel to suspicious flight ; Which must not be, for that 's against my course. I, under fair pretence of friendly ends, 160 And well-placed words of glozing courtesy, Baited with reasons not implausible, Wind me into the easy-hearted man, And hug him into snares. When once her eye Hath met the virtue of this magic dust, I shall appear some harmless villager Whom thrift keeps up about his country gear. But here she comes ; I fairly step aside, And hearken, if I may her business hear. 20 COMUS. The Lady enters. Lady. This way the noise was, if mine ear be true, 170 My best guide now. Methought it was the sound Of riot and ill-managed merriment, Such as the jocund flute or gamesome pipe Stirs up among the loose unlettered hinds, When, for their teeming flocks and granges full, In wanton dance they praise the bounteous Pan, And thank the gods amiss. I should be loth To meet the rudeness and swilled insolence Of such late wassailers ; yet, oh ! where else Shall I inform my unacquainted feet 180 In the blind mazes of this tangled wood ? My brothers, when they saw me wearied out With this long way, resolving here to lodge Under the spreading favour of these pines, Stepped, as they said, to the next thicket-side To bring me berries, or such cooling fruit As the kind hospitable woods provide. V~They left me then when the grey-hooded Even, Like a sad votarist in palmer's weed, Rose from the hindmost wheels of Phoebus' wain. 190 But where they are, and why they came not back, Is now the labour of my thoughts. 'T is likeliest They had engaged their wandering steps too far ; And envious darkness, ere they could return, Had stole them from me. Else, O thievish Night, Why shouldst thou, but for some felonious end, In thy dark lantern thus close up the stars ri That Nature hung in heaven, and filled their lamps COMUS. With everlasting oil to give due light To the misled and lonely traveller ? This is the place, as well as I may guess, Whence even now the tumult of loud mirth Was rife, and perfect in my listening ear ; Yet nought but single darkness do I find. What might this be ? A thousand fantasies Begin to throng into my memory, Of calling shapes, and beckoning shadows dire, And airy tongues that syllable men's names On sands and shores and desert wildernesses. These thoughts may startle well, but not astound The virtuous mind, that ever walks attended By a strong siding champion, Conscience. O, welcome, pure-eyed Faith, white-handed Hope, Thou hovering angel girt with golden wings, And thou unblemished form of Chastity ! I see ye visibly, and now believe That He, the Supreme Good, to whom all things ill Are but as slavish officers of vengeance, Would send a glistering guardian, if need were, To keep my life and honour unassailed. . . . Was I deceived, or did a sable cloud Turn forth her silver lining on the night ? I did not err : there does a sable cloud Turn forth her silver lining on the night, And casts a gleam over this tufted grove. I cannot hallo to my brothers, but Such noise as I can make to be heard farthest I '11 venture ; for my new-enlivened spirits Prompt me, and they perhaps are not far off. 22 COMUS. Song. Sweet Echo, sweetest nymph, that liv'st unseen 230 Within thy airy shell By slow Meander's margent green, And in the violet-embroidered vale Where the love-lorn nightingale Nightly to thee her sad song mourneth well : Canst thou not tell me of a gentle gay That likest thy Narcissus are ? O, if thou have Hid them in some flowery cave, Tell me but where, 240 Sweet Queen of Parley, Daughter of the Sphere ! So may'st thou be translated to the skies, And give resounding grace to all Heaven's harmonies ! Comus. Can any mortal mixture of earth's mould Breathe such divine enchanting ravishment ? Sure something holy lodges in that breast, And with these raptures moves the vocal air To testify his hidden residence. How sweetly did they float upon the wings Of silence, through the empty- vaulted night, 250 At every fall smoothing the raven down Of darkness till it smiled ! I have oft heard My mother Circe with the Sirens three, Amidst the flowery-kirtled Naiades, Culling their potent herbs and baleful drugs, Who, as they sung, would take the prisoned soul, And lap it in Elysium : Scylla wept, COMUS. 23 And chid her barking waves into attention, And fell Charybdis murmured soft applause. Yet they in pleasing slumber lulled the sense, 260 And in sweet madness robbed it of itself ; But such a sacred and home-felt delight, Such sober certainty of waking bliss, I never heard till now. I '11 speak to her, And she shall be my queen. — Hail, foreign wonder ! Whom certain these rough shades did never breed, Unless the goddess that in rural shrine Dwell' st here with Pan or Sylvan, by blest song Forbidding every bleak unkindly fog To touch the prosperous growth of this tall wood. 270 Lady. Nay, gentle shepherd, ill is lost that praise That is addressed to unattending ears. Not any boast of skill, but extreme shift How to regain my severed company, Compelled me to awake the courteous Echo To give me answer from her mossy couch. Co j mis. What chance, good Lady, hath bereft you thus ? Lady. Dim darkness and this leafy labyrinth. Comus. Could that divide you from near-ushering guides ? Lady. They left me weary on a grassy turf. 280 Comics. By falsehood, or discourtesy, or why ? Lady. To seek i' the valley some cool friendly spring. Comus. And left your fair side alj^unguarded, Lady ? Lady. They were but twain, and' purposed quick return. Comus. Perhaps forestalling night prevented them. 24 COMUS. Lady. How easy my misfortune is to hit ! Comus. Imports their loss, beside the present need ? Lady. No less than if I should my brothers lose. Comus. Were they of manly prime, or youthful bloom ? Lady. As smooth as Hebe's their unrazored lips. 290 Comus. Two such I saw, what time the laboured ox In his loose traces from the furrow came, And the swinked hedger at his supper sat. I saw them under a green mantling vine, That crawls along the side of yon small hill, Plucking ripe clusters from the tender shoots ; Their port was more than human, as they stood. I took it for a faery vision Of some gay creatures of the element, That in the colours of the rainbow live, 300 And play i' the plighted clouds. I was awe-strook, And, as I passed, I worshiped. If those you seek, It were a journey like the path to Heaven To help you find them. Lady. Gentle villager, What readiest way would bring me to that place ? Comus. Due west it rises from this shrubby point. Lady. To find out that, good shepherd, I suppose, In such a scant allowance of star-light, Would overtask the best land-pilot's art, Without the sure guess of well-practised feet. 310 Comus. I know each lane, and every alley green, Dingle, or bushy dell, of this wild wood, And every bosky bourn from side to side, My daily walks and ancient neighbourhood ; And, if your stray attendance be yet lodged, COMUS. 25 Or shroud within these limits, I shall know Ere morrow wake, or the low-roosted lark From her thatched pallet rouse. If otherwise, I can conduct you, Lady, to a low But loyal cottage, where you may be safe 320 Till further quest. Lady. Shepherd, I take thy word, And trust thy honest-offered courtesy, Which oft is sooner found in lowly sheds, With smoky rafters, than in tapestry halls And courts of princes, where it first was named, And yet is most pretended. In a place Less warranted than this, or less secure, I cannot be, that I should fear to change it. Eye me, blest Providence, and square my trial To my proportioned strength ! Shepherd, lead on. 330 The Two Brothers. Eld. Bro. Unmuffle, ye faint stars ; and thou, fair moon, That wont'st to love the traveller's benison, Stoop thy pale visage through an amber cloud, And disinherit Chaos, that reigns here In double night of darkness and of shades ; Or, if your influence be quite dammed up With black usurping mists, some gentle taper, Though a rush- candle from the wicker hole Of some clay habitation, visit us With thy long levelled rule of streaming light, 340 And thou shalt be our star of Arcady, Or Tyrian Cynosure. 26 COMUS. Sec. Bro. Or, if our eyes Be barred that happiness, might we but hear The folded flocks, penned in their wattled cotes, Or sound of pastoral reed with oaten stops, Or whistle from the lodge, or village cock Count the night-watches to his feathery dames, 'T would be some solace yet, some little cheering, In this close dungeon of innumerous boughs. But, oh, that hapless virgin, our lost sister ! 350 Where may she wander now, whither betake her From the chill dew, amongst rude burs and thistles ? Perhaps some cold bank is her bolster now, Or 'gainst the rugged bark of some broad elm Leans her unpillowed head, fraught with sad fears. What if in wild amazement and affright, Or, while we speak, within the direful grasp Of savage hunger, or of savage heat ! Eld. Bro. Peace, brother ; be not over-exqiiisite To cast the fashion of uncertain evils ; 360 For, grant they be so, while they rest unknown, What need a man forestall his date of grief, And run to meet what he would most avoid ? Or, if they be but false alarms of fear, How bitter is such self-delusion ! I do not think my sister so to seek, Or so unprincipled in virtue's book, And the sweet peace that goodness bosoms ever, As that the single want of light and noise (Not being in danger, as I trust she is not) 370 Could stir the constant mood of her calm thoughts, And put them into misbecoming plight. COM US. 27 I Virtue could see to do what Virtue would By her own radiant light, though sun and moon Were in the flat sea sunkj' And Wisdom's self Oft seeks to sweet retired solitude, Where, with her best nurse, Contemplation, She plumes her feathers, and lets grow her wings, 1 That, in the various bustle of resort, Were all to-ruffled, and sometimes impaired. 380 /Tie that has light within his own clear breast May sit i' the centre, and enjoy bright day : But he that hides a dark soul and foul thoughts Benighted walks under the mid-day sun ; Himself is his own dungeon. »J ^ Sec. Bro. ' 'Tis most true That musing meditation most affects The pensive secrecy of desert cell, Far from the cheerful haunt of men and herds, And sits as safe as in a senate-house ; For who would rob a hermit of his weeds, 390 His few books, or his beads, or maple dish, Or do his grey hairs any violence ? But Beauty, like the fair Hesperian tree Laden with blooming gold, had need the guard Of dragon-watch with unenchanted eye To save her blossoms, and defend her fruit, From the rash hand of bold Incontinence. You may as well spread out the unsunned heaps Of miser's treasure by an outlaw's den, And tell me it is safe, as bid me hope 400 Danger will wink on Opportunity, And let a single helpless maiden pass 28 COMUS. Uninjured in this wild surrounding waste. Of night or loneliness it recks me not ; I fear the dread events that dog them both, Lest some ill-greeting touch attempt the person Of our unowned sister. Eld. Bro. I do not, brother, Infer as if I thought my sister's state Secure without all doubt or controversy ; Yet, where an equal poise of hope and fear 410 Does arbitrate the event, my nature is That I incline to hope rather than fear, And gladly banish squint suspicion. My sister is not so defenceless left As you imagine ; she has a hidden strength, Which you remember not. Sec. Bro. What hidden strength, Unless the strength of Heaven, if you mean that ? Eld. Bro. I mean that too, but yet a hidden strength, Which, if Heaven gave it, may be termed her own. 'Tis chastity, my brother, chastity: 420 She that has that is clad in complete steel, And, like a quivered nymph with arrows keen, May trace huge forests, and unharboured heaths, Infamous hills, and sandy perilous wilds ; Where, through the sacred rays of chastity, No savage fierce, bandite, or mountaineer, Will dare to soil her virgin purity. Yea, there where very desolation dwells, By grots and caverns shagged with horrid shades, She may pass on with unblenched majesty, 43° Be it not done in pride, or in presumption. COMUS. 29 Some say no evil thing that walks by night, In fog or fire, by lake or moorish fen, Blue meagre hag, or stubborn unlaid ghost, That breaks his magic chains at curfew time, No goblin or swart faery of the mine, Hath hurtful power o'er true virginity. Do ye believe me yet, or shall I call Antiquity from the old schools of Greece To testify the arms of chastity ? 440 Hence had the huntress Dian her dread bow Fair silver-shafted queen for ever chaste, Wherewith she tamed the brinded lioness And spotted mountain-pard, but set at nought The frivolous bolt of Cupid ; gods and men Feared her stern frown, and she was queen o' the woods. What was that snaky-headed Gorgon shield That wise Minerva wore, unconquered virgin, Wherewith she freezed her foes to congealed stone, But rigid looks of chaste austerity, ,450 And noble grace that dashed brute violence With sudden adoration and blank awe ? So dear to Heaven is saintly chastity That, when a soul is found sincerely so, A thousand liveried angels lackey her, Driving far off each thing of sin and guilt, And in clear dream and solemn vision Tell her of things that no gross ear can hear ; Till oft converse with heavenly habitants Begin to cast a beam on the outward shape, 460 The unpolluted temple of the mind, And turns it by degrees to the soul's essence, 30 COMUS. Till all be made immortal.^ 1 But, when lust, By unchaste looks, loose gestures, and foul talk, But most by lewd and lavish act of sin, Lets in defilement to the inward parts, The soul grows clotted by contagion, Imbodies, and imbrutes, till she quite loose The divine property of her first being. Such are those thick and gloomy shadows damp 470 Oft seen in charnel-vaults and sepulchres, Lingering and sitting by a new-made grave, As loth to leave the body that it loved, And linked itself by carnal sensualty To a degenerate and degraded state. [/ Sec. Bro. How charming is divine Philosophy ! Not harsh and crabbed, as dull fools suppose, But musical as is Apollo's lute, And a perpetual feast of nectared sweets, Where no crude surfeit reigns. Eld. Bro. List ! list ! I hear 480 Some far-off hallo break the silent air. Sec. Bro. Methought so too ; what should it be ? Eld. Bro. For certain, Either some one, like us, night-foundered here, Or else some neighbour woodman, or, at worst, Some roving robber calling to his fellows. Sec. Bro. Heaven keep my sister ! Again, again, and near ! Best draw, and stand upon our guard. Eld. Bro. I '11 hallo. If he be friendly, he comes well : if not, Defence is a good cause, and Heaven be for us ! ft COM US. 31 The Attendant Spirit, habited like a shepherd. That hallo I should know. What are you ? speak. 490 Come not too near ; you fall on iron stakes else. Spir. What voice is that ? my young Lord ? speak again . Sec. Bro. O brother, 't is my father's Shepherd, sure. Eld. Bro. Thyrsis ! whose artful strains have oft delayed The huddling brook to hear his madrigal, And sweetened every musk-rose of the dale. How earnest thou here, good swain ? Hath any ram Slipped from the fold, or young kid lost his dam, Or straggling wether the pent flock forsook ? How couldst thou find this dark sequestered nook ? 500 Spir, O my loved master's heir, and his next joy, I came not here on such a trivial toy As a strayed ewe, or to pursue the stealth Of pilfering wolf ; not all the fleecy wealth That doth enrich these downs is worth a thought To this my errand, and the care it brought. But, oh ! my virgin Lady, where is she ? How chance she is not in your company ? Eld. Bro. To tell thee sadly, Shepherd, without blame Or our neglect, we lost her as we came. 510 Spir. Ay me unhappy ! then my fears are true. Eld. Bro. What fears, good Thyrsis ? Prithee briefly shew. Spir. I '11 tell ye. 'T is not vain or fabulous (Though so esteemed by shallow ignorance) What the sage poets, taught by the heavenly Muse, 32 COMUS. Storied of old in high immortal verse Of dire Chimeras and enchanted isles, And rifted rocks whose entrance leads to Hell ; For such there be, but unbelief is blind. Within the navel of this hideous wood, 520 Immured in cypress shades, a sorcerer dwells, Of Bacchus and of Circe born, great Comus, Deep skilled in all his mother's witcheries, And here to every thirsty wanderer By sly enticement gives his baneful cup, With many murmurs mixed, whose pleasing poison The visage quite transforms of him that drinks, And the inglorious likeness of a beast Fixes instead, unmoulding reason's mintage Charactered in the face. This have I learnt 530 Tending my flocks hard by i' the hilly crofts That brow this bottom glade ; whence night by night He and his monstrous rout are heard to howl Like stabled wolves, or tigers at their prey, Doing abhorred rites to Hecate In their obscured haunts of inmost bowers. Yet have they many baits and guileful spells To inveigle and' invite the unwary sense Of them that pass unweeting by the way. This evening late, by then the chewing flocks 540 Had ta'en their supper on the savoury herb Of knot-grass dew-besprent, and were in fold, I sat me down to watch upon a bank With ivy canopied, and interwove With flaunting honeysuckle, and began, Wrapt in a pleasing fit of melancholy, COMUS. 33 To meditate my rural minstrelsy, Till fancy had her fill. But ere a close The wonted roar was up amidst the woods, And filled the air with barbarous dissonance ; 550 At which I ceased, and listened them awhile, Till an unusual stop of sudden silence Gave respite to the drowsy-flighted steeds That draw the litter of close-curtained Sleep. At last a soft and solemn-breathing sound Rose like a steam of rich distilled perfumes, And. stole upon the air, that even Silence Was took ere she was ware, and wished she might Deny her nature, and be never more, Still to be so displaced. I was all ear, 560 And took in strains that might create a soul Under the ribs of Death. But, oh ! ere long Too well I did perceive it was the voice Of my most honoured Lady, your dear sister. Amazed I stood, harrowed with grief and fear ; And "O poor hapless nightingale," thought I, " How sweet thou sing'st, how near the deadly snare ! " Then clown the lawns I ran with headlong haste, Through paths and turnings often trod by day, Till, guided by mine ear, I found the place 570 Where that damned wizard, hid in sly disguise (For so by certain signs I knew), had met Already, ere my best speed could prevent, The aidless innocent lady, his wished prey ; Who gently asked if he had seen such two, Supposing him some neighbour villager. Longer I durst not stay, but soon I guessed 34 COMUS. Ye were the two she meant ; with that I sprung Into swift flight, till I had found you here ; But further know I not. Sec. Bro. O night and shades, 580 How are ye joined with hell in triple knot Against the unarmed weakness of one virgin, Alone and helpless ! Is this the confidence You gave me, brother ? Eld. Bro. Yes, and keep it still ; Lean on it safely ; not a period Shall be unsaid for me. Against the threats Of malice or of sorcery, or that power Which erring men call Chance, this I hold firm : ^Virtue may be assailed, but never hurt, \ Surprised by unjust force, but not enthralled ; J 59° Yea, even that which Mischief meant most harm Shall in the happy trial prove most glory. But evil on itself shall back recoil, And mix no more with goodness, when at last, Gathered like scum, and settled to itself, It shall be in eternal restless change Self-fed and self- consumed. If this fail, The pillared firmament is rottenness, And earth's base built on stubble. But come, let 's on ! Against the opposing will and arm of heaven 600 May never this just sword be lifted up ; But, for that- damned magician, let him be girt With all the griesly legions that troop Under the sooty flag of Acheron, Harpies and Hydras, or all the monstrous forms 'Twixt Africa and Ind, I '11 find him out, COMUS. 35 And force him to return his purchase back, Or drag him by the curls to a foul death, Cursed as his life. Spir. Alas ! good venturous youth, I love thy courage yet, and bold emprise ; 610 But here thy sword can do thee little stead. Far other arms and other weapons must Be those that quell the might of hellish charms. He with his bare wand can unthread thy joints, And crumble all thy sinews. Eld. Bro. Why, prithee, Shepherd, How durst thou then thyself approach so near As to make this relation ? Spir. Care and utmost shifts How to secure the Lady from surprisal Brought to my mind a certain shepherd lad, Of small regard to see to, yet well skilled 620 In every virtuous plant and healing herb That spreads her verdant leaf to the morning ray. He loved me well, and oft would beg me sing ; Which when I did, he on the tender grass Would sit, and hearken even to ecstasy, And in requital ope his leathern scrip, And show me simples of a thousand names, Telling their strange and vigorous faculties. Amongst the rest a small unsightly root, But of divine effect, he culled me out. 630 The leaf was darkish, and had prickles on it, But in another country, as he said, Bore a bright golden flower, but not in this soil : Unknown, and like esteemed, and the dull swain 36 COMUS. Treads on it daily with his clouted shoon ; And yet more med'cinal is it than that Moly That Hermes once to wise Ulysses gave. He called it Haemony, and gave it me, And bade me keep it as of sovran use 'Gainst all enchantments, mildew blast, or damp, 640 Or ghastly Furies' apparition. I pursed it up, but little reckoning made, Till now that this extremity compelled. But now I find it true ; for by this means I knew the foul enchanter, though disguised, Entered the very lime-twigs of his spells, And yet came off. If you have this about you (As I will give you when we go), you may Boldly assault the necromancer's hall ; Where if he be, with dauntless hardihood 650 And brandished blade rush on him : break his glass, And shed the luscious liquor on the ground ; But seize his wand. Though he and his curst crew Fierce sign of battle make, and menace high, Or, like the sons of Vulcan, vomit smoke, Yet will they soon retire, if he but shrink. Eld. Bro. Thyrsis, lead on apace ; I '11 follow thee ; And some good angel bear a shield before us ! The Scene changes to a stately palace, set out with all ?nanner of deliciousness : soft music, tables spread with all dainties. Comus appears with his rabble, and the Lady set in an enchanted chair ; to whom he offers his glass ; which she Puts by, and goes about to rise. Comus. Nay, Lady, sit. If I but wave this wand, Your nerves are all chained up in alabaster, 660 COM US. 37 And you a statue, or as Daphne was, Root-bound, that fled Apollo. Lady. Fool, do not boast. Thou canst not touch the freedom of my mind With all thy charms, although this corporal rind Thou hast immanacled while Heaven sees good. Comics. Why are you vexed, Lady ? why do you frown ? Here dwell no frowns, nor anger ; from these gates Sorrow flies far. See, here be all the pleasures That fancy can beget on youthful thoughts, When the fresh blood grows lively, and returns 670 Brisk as the April buds in primrose season. And first behold this cordial julep here, That flames and dances in his crystal bounds, With spirits of balm and fragrant syrups mixed. Not that Nepenthes which the wife of Thone In Egypt gave to Jove-born Helena Is of such power to stir up joy as this, To life so friendly, or so cool to thirst. Why should you be so cruel to yourself, And to those dainty limbs, which Nature lent 680 For gentle usage and soft delicacy ? But you invert the covenants of her trust, And harshly deal, like an ill borrower, W r ith that which you received on other terms, Scorning the unexempt condition By which all mortal frailty must subsist, Refreshment after toil, ease after pain, That have been tired all day without repast, And timely rest have wanted. But, fair virgin, This will restore all soon. 38 COMUS. Lady. 'T will not, false traitor ! 690 'Twill not restore the truth and honesty That thou hast banished from thy tongue with lies. Was this the cottage and the safe abode Thou told'st me of ? What grim aspects are these, These oughly-headed monsters ? Mercy guard me ! Hence with thy brewed enchantments, foul deceiver ! Hast thou betrayed my credulous innocence With vizored falsehood and base forgery ? And would' st thou seek again to trap me here With liquorish baits, fit to ensnare a brute ? 700 Were it a draught for Juno when she banquets, I would not taste thy treasonous offer. (LNone But such as are good men can give good things ; And that which is not good is not delicious To a well-governed and wise appetite. Comus. O foolishness of men ! that lend their ears To those budge doctors of the Stoic fur, And fetch their precepts from the Cynic tub, Praising the lean and sallow Abstinence ! Wherefore did Nature pour her bounties forth 710 With such a full and unwithdrawing hand, Covering the earth with odours, fruits, and flocks, Thronging the seas with spawn innumerable, But all to please and sate the curious taste ? And set to work millions of spinning worms, That in their green shops weave the smooth-haired silk, To deck her sons ; and, that no corner might Be vacant of her plenty, in her own loins She hutched the all-worshipped ore and precious gems, To store her children with. If all the world 720 COMUS. 39 Should, in a pet of temperance, feed on pulse, Drink the clear stream, and nothing wear but frieze, The All-giver would be unthanked, would be unpraised, Not half his riches known, and yet despised ; And we should serve him as a grudging master, As a penurious niggard of his wealth, And live like Nature's bastards, not her sons, Who would be quite surcharged with her own weight, And strangled with her waste fertility : The earth cumbered, and the winged air darked with plumes, 73 o The herds would over-multitude their lords ; The sea o'erfraught would swell, and the unsought diamonds Would so emblaze the forehead of the deep, And so bestud with stars, that they below Would grow inured to light, and come at last To gaze upon the sun with shameless brows. List, Lady ; be not coy, and be not cozened With that same vaunted name, Virginity. Beauty is Nature's coin ; must not be hoarded, But must be current ; and the good thereof 740 Consists in mutual and partaken bliss, Unsavoury in the enjoyment of itself. If you let slip time, like a neglected rose It withers on the stalk with languished head. Beauty is Nature's brag, and must be shown In courts, at feasts, and high solemnities, Where most may wonder at the workmanship. It is for homely features to keep home ; They had their name thence : coarse complexions 40 COMUS. And cheeks of sorry grain will serve to ply 750 The sampler, and to tease the huswife's wool. What need a vermeil-tinctured lip for that, Love-darting eyes, or tresses like the morn ? There was another meaning in these gifts ; Think what, and be advised ; you are but young yet. Lady. I had not thought to have unlocked my lips In this unhallowed air, but that this juggler Would think to charm my judgment, as mine eyes, Obtruding false rules pranked in reason's garb. I hate when vice can bolt her arguments 760 And virtue has no tongue to check her pride. Impostor ! do not charge most innocent Nature, As if she would her children should be riotous With her abundance. She, good cateress, Means her provision only to the good, That live according to her sober laws, And holy dictate of spare Temperance. If every just man that now pines with want Had but a moderate and beseeming share Of that which lewdly-pampered Luxury 770 Now heaps upon some few with vast excess, Nature's full blessings would be well dispensed In unsuperfluous even proportion, And she no whit encumbered with her store ; And then the Giver would be better thanked, His praise clue paid : for swinish gluttony Ne'er looks to Heaven amidst his gorgeous feast, But with besotted base ingratitude Crams, and blasphemes his Feeder. Shall I go on ? Or have I said enow ? To him that dares 780 COM US. 41 Arm his profane tongue with contemptuous words Against the sun-clad power of chastity Fain would I something say ; — yet to what end ? Thou hast nor ear, nor soul, to apprehend The sublime notion and high mystery That must be uttered to unfold the sage And serious doctrine of Virginity ; And thou art worthy that thou shouldst not know More happiness than this thy present lot. Enjoy your dear wit, and gay rhetoric, 790 That hath so well been taught her dazzling fence ; Thou art not fit to hear thyself convinced. Yet, should I try, the uncontrolled worth Of this pure cause would kindle my rapt spirits To such a flame of sacred vehemence That dumb things would be moved to sympathise, And the brute Earth would lend her nerves, and shake, Till all thy magic structures, reared so high, Were shattered into heaps o'er thy false head. Comus. She fables not. I feel that I do fear 800 Her words set off by some superior power ; And, though not mortal, yet a cold shuddering dew Dips me all o'er, as when the wrath of Jove Speaks thunder and the chains of Erebus To some of Saturn's crew. I must dissemble, And try her yet more strongly. — Come, no more ! This is mere moral babble, and direct Against the canon laws of our foundation. I must not suffer this ; yet 't is but the lees And settlings of a melancholy blood. 810 But this will cure all straight ; one sip of this 42 COMUS. Will bathe the drooping spirits in delight Beyond the bliss of dreams. Be wise, and taste. The Brothers rush in with swords drawn, wrest his glass out of his hand, and break it against the ground : his rout ?nake sign of resistance, but are all driven in. The Attend- ant Spirit co?nes in. Spir. What ! have you let the false enchanter scape ? O ye mistook ; ye should have snatched his wand, And bound him fast. Without his rod reversed, And backward mutters of dissevering power, We cannot free the Lady that sits here In stony fetters fixed and motionless. Yet stay : be not disturbed ; now I bethink me, 820 Some other means I have which may be used, Which once of Melibceus old I learnt, The soothes t shepherd that e'er piped on plains. There is a gentle Nymph not far from hence, That with moist curb sways the smooth Severn stream : Sabrina is her name : a virgin pure ; Whilom she was the daughter of Locrine, That had the sceptre from his father Brute. She, guiltless damsel, flying the mad pursuit Of her enraged stepdame, Guendolen, 830 Commended her fair innocence to the flood That stayed her flight with his cross-flowing course. The water-nymphs, that in the bottom played, Held up their pearled wrists, and took her in, Bearing her straight to aged Nereus' hall ; Who, piteous of her woes, reared her lank head, And gave her to his daughters to imbathe y ^D (Xy^y{ COMUS. 43 In nectared lavers strewed with asphodil, And through the porch and inlet of each sense Dropt in ambrosial oils, till she revived, 840 And underwent a quick immortal change, Made Goddess of the river. Still she retains Her maiden gentleness, and oft at eve Visits the herds along the twilight meadows, Helping all urchin blasts, and ill-luck signs That the shrewd meddling elf delights to make, Which she with precious vialed liquors heals : For which the shepherds, at their festivals, Carol her goodness loud in rustic lays, And throw sweet garland wreaths into her stream 850 Of pansies, pinks, and gaudy daffodils. And, as the old swain said, she can unlock The clasping charm, and thaw the numbing spell, If she be right invoked in warbled song ; For maidenhood she loves, and will be swift To aid a virgin, such as was herself, In hard-besetting need. This will I try, And add the power of some adjuring verse. Song. Sabrina fair, Listen where thou art sitting 860 Under the glassy, cool, translmcent wave, In twisted braids of lilies knitting The loose train of thy amber-dropping hair ; Listen for dear honour's sake, Goddess of the silver lake, Listen and save ! 44 COMUS. Listen, and appear to us, In name of great Oceanus. By the earth-shaking Neptune's mace, And Tethys' grave majestic pace ; 870 By hoary Nereus' wrinkled look, And the Carpathian wizard's hook ; By scaly Triton's winding shell, And old soothsaying Glaucus' spell ; By Leucothea's lovely hands, And her son that rules the strands ; By Thetis' tinsel-slippered feet, And the songs of Sirens sweet ; By dead Parthenope's dear tomb, And fair Ligea's golden comb, 880 Wherewith she sits on diamond rocks Sleeking her soft alluring locks ; By all the Nymphs that nightly dance Upon thy streams with wily glance ; Rise, rise, and heave thy rosy head From thy coral-paven bed, And bridle in thy headlong wave, Till thou our summons answered have. Listen and save ! Sabrina rises, attended by \Vater-1iy7nphs, and sings. By the rushy-fringed bank, 890 Where grows the willow and the osier dank, My sliding chariot stays, Thick set with agate, and the azurn sheen Of turkis blue, and emerald green, That in the channel strays ; \yi^v\j^A^ / ' COMUS. Whilst from off the waters fleet Thus I set my printless feet O'er the cowslip's velvet head, That bends not as I tread. Gentle swain, at thy request 900 I am here ! Spir. Goddess dear, We implore thy powerful hand To undo the charmed band Of true virgin here distressed Through the force and through the wile Of unblessed enchanter vile. Sabr. Shepherd, 't is my office best To help ensnared chastity. Brightest Lady, look on me. 910 Thus I sprinkle on thy breast Drops that from my fountain pure I have kept of precious cure ; Thrice upon thy finger's tip, Thrice upon thy rubied lip : Next this marble venomed seat, Smeared with gums of glutinous heat, I touch with chaste palms moist and cold. Now the spell hath lost his hold ; And I must haste ere morning hour 920 To wait in Amphitrite's bower. Sabrina descends, and the Lady rises out of her seat. Spir. Virgin, daughter of Locrine, Sprung of old Anchises' line, 46 COMUS. May thy brimmed waves for this Their full tribute never miss From a thousand petty rills, That tumble down the snowy hills : Summer drouth or singed air Never scorch thy tresses fair, Nor wet October's torrent flood 930 Thy molten crystal fill with mud ; May thy billows roll ashore The beryl and the golden ore ; May thy lofty head be crowned With many a tower and terrace round, And here and there thy banks upon With groves of myrrh and cinnamon. Come, Lady ; while Heaven lends us grace, Let us fly this cursed place, Lest the sorcerer us entice 940 With some other new device. Not a waste or needless sound Till we come to holier ground. I shall be your faithful guide Through this gloomy covert wide ; And not many furlongs thence Is your Father's residence, Where this night are met in state Many a friend to gratulate His wished presence, and beside 950 All the swains that there abide With jigs and rural dance resort. We shall catch them at their sport, And our sudden coming there COM US. 47 Will double all their mirth and cheer. Come, let us haste ; the stars grow high, But Night sits monarch yet in the mid sky. The Scene changes, presenting Ludlow Town, and the President's Castle: then come in Country Dancers; after them the Attendant Spirit, with the two Brothers and the Lady. Song. Spir. Back, shepherds, back! Enough your play Till next sun-shine holiday. Here be, without duck or nod, g6o Other trippings to be trod Of lighter toes, and such court guise As Mercury did first devise With the mincing Dryades On the lawns and on the leas. The second Song presents them to their Father and Mother. Noble Lord and Lady bright, I have brought ye new delight. Here behold so goodly grown Three fair branches of your own. Heaven hath timely tried their youth, 970 Their faith, their patience, and their truth, And sent them here through hard assays With a crown of deathless praise, To triumph in victorious dance O'er sensual folly and intemperance. 48 COMUS. The dances ended, the Spirit epiloguizes. Spir. To the ocean now I fly, And those happy climes that lie Where day never shuts his eye, Up in the broad fields of the sky. There I suck the liquid air, 980 All amidst the gardens fair Of Hesperus, and his daughters three That sing about the golden tree. Along the crisped shades and bowers Revels the spruce and jocund Spring ; The Graces and the rosy-bosomed Hours Thither all their bounties bring. There eternal Summer dwells ; And west winds with musky wing About the cedarn alleys fling 990 Nard and cassia's balmy smells. Iris there with humid bow Waters the odorous banks, that blow Flowers of more mingled hue Than her pur fled scarf can shew, And drenches with Elysian dew (List, mortals, if .your ears be true) Beds of hyacinth and roses, Where young Adonis oft reposes, Waxing well of his deep wound, 1000 In slumber soft, and on the ground Sadly sits the Assyrian queen. But far above, in spangled sheen, Celestial Cupid, her famed son, advanced COMUS. 49 Holds his dear Psyche, sweet entranced After her wandering labours long, Till free consent the gods among Make her his eternal bride, And from her fair unspotted side Two blissful twins are to be born, ioio Youth and Joy ; so Jove hath sworn. But now my task is smoothly done : I can fly, or I can run, Quickly to the green earth's end, Where the bowed welkin slow doth bend, And from thence can soar as soon To the corners of the moon. Mortals, that would follow me, Love Virtue ; she alone is free. She can teach ye how to climb 1020 Higher than the sphery chime ; Or, if Virtue feeble were, Heaven itself would stoop to her. LYCIDAS. In this Monody the Author bewails a learned Friend, unfortunately drowned in his passage from Chester on the Irish Seas, 1637 ; and, by occasion, foretells the ruin of our corrupted Clergy, then in their height. Yet once more, O ye laurels, and once more, Ye myrtles brown, with ivy never sere, I come to pluck your berries harsh and crude, And with forced fingers rude Shatter your leaves before the mellowing year. Bitter constraint and sad occasion dear Compels me to disturb your season due ; For Lycidas is dead, dead ere his prime, Young Lycidas, and hath not left his peer. ' Who would not sing for Lycidas ? he knew 10 Himself to sing, and build the lofty rhyme. He must not float upon his watery bier Unwept, and welter to the parching wind, Without the meed of some melodious tear. Begin, then, Sisters of the sacred well That from beneath the seat of Jove doth spring ; Begin, and somewhat loudly sweep the string. Hence with denial vain and coy excuse : So may some gentle Muse With lucky words favour my destined urn, 20 And as he passes turn, And bid fair peace be to my sable shroud ! 50 LYC/DAS. 51 For we were nursed upon the self-same hill, Fed the same flock, by fountain, shade, and rill ; Together both, ere the high lawns appeared Under the opening eyelids of the Morn, We drove a-field, and both together heard What time the grey-fly winds her sultry horn, Battening our flocks with the fresh dews of night, Oft till the star that rose at evening bright 30 Toward heaven's descent had sloped his westering wheel. Meanwhile the rural ditties were not mute ; Tempered to the oaten flute, Rough Satyrs danced, and Fauns with cloven heel From the glad sound would not be absent long ; And old Damcetas loved to hear our song. But, oh ! the heavy change, now thou art gone, Now thou art gone and never must return ! Thee, Shepherd, thee the woods and desert caves, With wild thyme and the gadding vine o'ergrown, 40 And all their echoes, mourn. The willows, and the hazel copses green, Shall now no more be seen Fanning their joyous leaves to thy soft lays. As killing as the canker to the rose, Or taint-worm to the weanling herds that graze, Or frost to flowers, that their gay wardrobe wear, When first the white-thorn blows ; Such, Lycidas, thy loss to shepherd's ear. Where were ye, Nymphs, when the remorseless deep 50 Closed o'er the head of your loved Lycidas ? For neither were ye playing on the steep Where your old bards, the famous Druids, lie, 52 L YCIDAS. Nor on the shaggy top of Mona high, Nor yet where Deva spreads her wizard stream. Ay me ! I fondly dream " Had ye been there," ... for what could that have done ? What could the Muse herself that Orpheus bore, The Muse herself, for her enchanting son, Whom universal nature did lament, 60 When, by the rout that made the hideous roar, His gory visage down the stream was sent, Down the swift Hebrus to the Lesbian shore ? Alas ! what boots it with uncessant care To tend the homely, slighted, shepherd's trade, And strictly meditate the thankless Muse ? Were it not better done, as others use, To sport with Amaryllis in the shade, Or with the tangles of Nesera's hair ? Fame is the spur that the clear spirit doth raise 70 (That last infirmity of noble mind) To scorn delights and live laborious days ; But, the fair guerdon when we hope to find, And think to burst out into sudden blaze, Comes the blind Fury with the abhorred shears, And slits the thin-spun life. " But not the praise," Phcebus replied, and touched my trembling ears : " Fame is no plant that grows on mortal soil, Nor in the glistering foil Set off to the world, nor in broad rumour lies, 80 But lives and spreads aloft by those pure eyes And perfect witness of all-judging Jove ; As he pronounces lastly on each deed, Of so much fame in heaven expect thy meed." L YCIDAS. 53 O fountain Arethuse, and thou honoured flood, Smooth-sliding Mincius, crowned with vocal reeds, That strain I heard was of a higher mood. But now my oat proceeds, And listens to the Herald of the Sea, That came in Neptune's plea. 9 o He asked the waves, and asked the felon winds, What hard mishap hath doomed this gentle swain ? And questioned every gust of rugged wings That blows from off each beaked promontory. They knew not of his story ; And sage Hippotades their answer brings, That not a blast was from his dungeon strayed : The air was calm, and on the level brine Sleek Panope with all her sisters played. It was that fatal and perfidious bark, ioo Built in the eclipse, and rigged with curses dark, That sunk so low that sacred head of thine. Next, Camus, reverend sire, went footing slow, His mantle hairy, and his bonnet sedge, Inwrought with figures dim, and on the edge Like to that sanguine flower inscribed with woe. " Ah ! who hath reft," quoth he, " my dearest pledge ? " Last came, and last did go, The Pilot of the Galilean Lake ; Two massy keys he bore of metals twain no (The golden opes, the iron shuts amain). He shook his mitred locks, and stern bespake : — " How well could I have spared for thee, young swain, Enow of such as, for their bellies' sake, Creep, and intrude, and climb into the fold ! 54 L YCIDAS. Of other care they little reckoning make Than how to scramble at the shearers' feast, And shove away the worthy bidden guest. Blind mouths ! that scarce themselves know how to hold A sheep-hook, or have learnt aught else the least 120 That to the faithful herdman's art belongs ! What recks it them ? What need they ? They are sped : And, when they list, their lean and flashy songs Grate on their scrannel pipes of wretched straw ; The hungry sheep look up, and are not fed, But, swoln with wind and the rank mist they draw, Rot inwardly, and foul contagion spread ; Besides what the grim wolf with privy paw Daily devours apace, and nothing said. But that two-handed engine at the door 130 Stands ready to smite once, and smite no more." Return, Alpheus ; the dread voice is past That shrunk thy streams ; return Sicilian Muse, And call the vales, and bid them hither cast Their bells and flowerets of a thousand hues. Ye valleys low, where the mild whispers use Of shades, and wanton winds, and gushing brooks, On whose fresh lap the swart star sparely looks, Throw hither all your quaint enamelled eyes, That on the green turf suck the honeyed showers, 140 And purple all the ground with vernal flowers. Bring the rathe primrose that forsaken dies, The tufted crow-toe, and pale jessamine, The white pink, and the pansy freaked with jet, The glowing violet, The musk-rose, and the well-attired woodbine, L YCIDAS. 55 With cowslips wan that hang the pensive head, And every flower that sad embroidery wears ; Bid amaranthus all his beauty shed, And daffadillies fill their cups with tears, 150 To strew the laureate hearse where Lycid lies. For so, to interpose a little ease, Let our frail thoughts dally with false surmise, Ay me ! whilst thee the shores and sounding seas Wash far away, where'er thy bones are hurled ; Whether beyond the stormy Hebrides, Where thou perhaps under the whelming tide Visit'st the bottom of the monstrous world ; Or whether thou, to our moist vows denied, Sleep 'st by the fable of Bellerus old, 160 Where the great Vision of the guarded mount Looks toward Namancos and Bayona's hold. Look homeward, Angel, now, and melt with ruth : And, O ye dolphins, waft the hapless youth. Weep no more, woeful shepherds, weep no more, For Lycidas, your sorrow, is not dead, Sunk though he be beneath the watery floor. So sinks the day-star in the ocean bed, And yet anon repairs his drooping head, And tricks his beams, and with new-spangled ore 170 Flames in the forehead of the morning sky : So Lycidas sunk low, but mounted high, Through the dear might of Him that walked the waves, Where, other groves and other streams along, With nectar pure his oozy locks he laves, And hears the unexpressive nuptial song, In the blest kingdoms meek of joy and love. 56 LYCIDAS. There entertain him all the Saints above, In solemn troops, and sweet societies, That sing, and singing in their glory move, 180 And wipe the tears for ever from his eyes. Now, Lycidas, the shepherds weep no more ; Henceforth thou art the Genius of the shore, In thy large recompense, and shalt be good To all that wander in that perilous flood. Thus sang the uncouth swain to the oaks and rills, While the still morn went out with sandals grey : He touched the tender stops of various quills, With eager thought warbling his Doric lay : And now the sun had stretched out all the hills, 190 And now was dropt into the western bay. At last he rose, and twitched his mantle blue : To-morrow to fresh woods, and pastures new. NOTES. ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE NOTES. Abbott, Abbott's Shakespearian Grammar (1888); C, Comus ; Cent. Diet., The Century Dictionary ; Class. Diet., — any good Classical Dic- tionary will serve, but perhaps Gayley's Classic Myths will best suit the needs of secondary students; F. Q., Spenser's Faerie Qneene ; II P., II Penseroso ; UAL, H Allegro ; Lye, Lycidas ; Nat., On the Morning of Christ's Nativity ; New Eng. Diet., The New English Dictionary ; P. L., Paradise Lost ; P. R., Paradise Regained ; R. of L., Shakspere's Rape of Lucrece ; S. A., Samson Agonistes ; Schmidt, Schmidt's Shakes- peare-Lexicon (1886); Stand. Diet., The Standard Dictionary ; V. and A., Shakspere's Venus and Adonis. The following abbreviations of the names of Shakspere's plays will be easily understood : A. Y. L., Cor., Cymb., Ham., Hen. V, 2 Hen. VI, 3 Hen. VI, Hen. VIII, Lear, L. L. L., Macb., M. N D., M. of V, Much Ado, M. W., Oth., R. and /., Rich. II, Rich. Ill, T. A., Temp., T G. of V, T. N, T. of S., W. T. The references to Shakspere's works are all to the " Globe " edition ; those to Milton's works are to Masson's " Library Edition." NOTES. L'ALLEGRO. L' Allegro and II Penseroso, owing to their close relation in form and matter, should be read together. Although they were not printed until 1645, tne y seem to have been written much earlier, probably about 1632 or 1633, at Horton, where Milton had retired from Cambridge after taking his M.A. degree. The titles are from the Italian, and imply " the cheerful man " and "the thoughtful man." Much discussion has arisen among editors and critics as to the import of these poems, which the want of space prevents us from considering. Perhaps, after all, it will be best for the student to work out his own theory of the matter, and then correct and supplement it by consulting the Introduction to this and the standard editions. Milton, in the composition of these poems, seems to have been indebted for a few slight hints and sugges- tions, in addition to those pointed out in the notes, to some verses entitled The .Author's Abstract of Melancholy, prefixed to Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy, and to a song beginning " Hence, all you vain delights," in Fletcher's play of The Nice Valour. 1 2. Cerberus. Who was Cerberus ? In classical mythology Erebus was the spouse of Night, but Milton, in order to have Melancholy inspire horror and repulsion, invented the present genealogy. 1 3. Stygian cave. The den of Cerberus was on the further bank of the Styx, the chief river of the nether world, and in front of it were landed all the shades ferried over by Charon. Browne takes Stygian here in the sense of " detested." For Styx, cf P. L. ii. 577 ; also Stygian darkness, C. 132. 1 4. Shapes. Cf II P. 6, C. 207. When we note the indefiniteness of the images in this line, we recall that marvelous description of Death in P. L. ii. 666-673, and Coleridge's remark in his Lectures and Notes on Shakspere (Bohn ed.), p. 91 : "The grandest efforts of poetry are 59 60 NOTES. where the imagination is called forth, not to produce a distinct form, but a strong working of the mind, still offering what is still repelled, and again creating what is again rejected ; the result being what the poet wishes to impress, namely, the substitution of a sublime feeling of the unimaginable for a mere image." In the present line the allitera- tion is also suggestive. 1 5. Uncouth. Radically it means "not known, not familiar, strange, and hence perplexing, filling the soul with dismal apprehensions " (Schmidt) ; elsewhere {Lye. 186, P. L. v. 98, vi. 362) Milton seems to have had in mind both the radical and the derived meanings of the word. For the latter, see Cent. Diet. 1 6. Brooding. If taken literally, with an allusion in jealous wings to " the watch which fowls keep when they are sitting" (Warburton), we should expect her instead of his, but brooding rather means " over- shadowing," and his is then accounted for by supposing that Milton had in mind the classical Erebus (Hales). Of what is Darkness jealous ? 1 7. Night-raven. Probably the ill-omened raven is meant, al- though it is not a night bird. Cf Much Ado ii. 3. 84. 1 9. Ragged. Rugged, uneven. Though used but once in Milton's poetry, the word is elsewhere not infrequently found as an epithet for rocks ; cf. Isaiah ii. 21, 71 G. of V. i. 2. 121, etc. 1 10. Cimmerian desert. " She [the ship] came to the limits of the world, to the deep-flowing Oceanus. There is the land and the city of the Cimmerians, shrouded in mist and cloud, and never does the shining sun look down on them with his rays, neither when he climbs up the starry heavens, nor when again he turns earthward from the firmament, but deadly night is outspread over miserable mortals." — Odyssey xi. 13-19 (Butcher and Lang). They were " known afterwards as a histor- ical people, figuring round and near the Black Sea (whence the name Crimed) " (Masson). Dark is added for emphasis. What means has Milton employed in the first ten lines to give us such a repugnant picture of Melancholy? 1 11. Fair and free. Almost a set phrase among poets to denote beauty and grace in women. In this case, however, free may mean "free from care "; cf. 13, also Oth. iii. 3. 340. Why do we have a dif- ferent meter here ? 1 12. Yclept. Called; see Lounsbury, Hist, of Eng. Lang., pp. 3 8 7-39°- 1 15. Two sister Graces. See Class. Diet, for the names and attri- butes of the three Graces. The parentage here (14-16) given is found NOTES. 61 in a comment by Servius on sE7ieid i. 720 (Keightley), while the one that follows (17-24) is, perhaps, Milton's own invention. 1 16. Ivy-crowned Bacchus. See Class. Diet. ; cf. C. 54-55. 1 17. Or whether, etc. Note the change in construction here, — rather frequent in Milton. As some sager sing. If, as seems probable, this alternative gene- alogy is the invention of Milton, the present phrase seems to be a device for modestly recommending it to others, — at any rate no one has yet discovered who these sager poets are. How do you parse sager ? 1 18. Frolic. Frolicsome ; cf. C. 59. Breathes is used transitively. 1 20. A-Maying. For the explanation of this form, consult the New Eng. Diet., s.v. A, prep. This is one of the many allusions in English prose and poetry to the May festivities, for an account of which see Chambers, Book of Days. 2 22. Fresh-blown roses, etc. Cf. T. of S. ii. 1. 174. 2 24. Buxom, blithe, and debonair. Distinguish ; note word ori- gins. Observe the different arrangement of the words in Thomas Randolph's Aristippus (1635): "To make one blithe, buxome, and deboneer " (quoted by Todd). 2 26-2S. Jest, etc. .Consult a good dictionary and write a note on these lines, explaining Milton's nice distinctions. Wreathed is a trans- ferred epithet ; wanton here means "playful." Look up etymology of wanton. 2 28. . Nods and becks, etc. Do you suppose Milton thought out this combination, or did he remember the line quoted by Warton from Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy ? " With becks, and nods, and smiles again." 2 29. Hebe. See Class. Diet. • cf C. 290. 2 31. Derides. Subject? 2 32. Laughter, etc. Addison thought this " a very poetical figure of laughter " ; cf. Cymb. i. 6. 6S-69. 2 33. Come, and trip it, etc. Cf. Temp. iv. 1. 44-47, C. 143-144, 960-962 ; contrast // P. 37 et seq. Fantastic, because the movements of the dance are to be whimsical and capricious. How many different functions has the pronoun it, and which one of these is here illustrated ? 2 36. Mountain-nymph. " I suppose Liberty is called the mountain nymph, because the people in mountainous countries have generally preserved their liberties longest, as the Britons formerly in Wales, and the inhabitants in the mountains of Switzerland at this day" (Newton). " Or does he refer to the absence of conventional restraints and general 62 NOTES. sense of unconfinement that belong to mountains ? " (Hales). Or does he, as Warton thought, merely mean to call Liberty an Oread, a nymph of mountains and grottos ? If the last, the poet is again modifying ancient mythology to suit his pleasure, for, as Hales reminds us, " No such nymph is found amongst the acknowledged Oreads and Oro- demniads of the Greeks." Why in thy right hand? 2 38. Crew. Milton uses this word twenty-one times in his poems, and, with the exception of its use in this line, always in a bad sense. Cf C. 653, 805, P. L. i. 51, 477, 688, 751, etc. 2 40. Unreproved. Unreprovable; cf. C. 395, 793, and see Abbott, § 375. The arrangement of the adjectives in this line is imitated from the Greek, and is a common device in Milton. Make a list of the examples found in the poems in this volume, and try to ascertain the force of the final adjective in each case. 2-3 41-68. " This passage," says Trent, "... describes by a series of exquisite though unelaborated pictures the pleasures of a cheerful man abroad early on a delightful morning. It is plain . . . that Milton is describing an ideal day, rather than one belonging to a particular season. Minute critics have succeeded in showing that some of the pictures are not entirely true to nature ; but they waste their time, for Milton has surely imbibed nature's spirit, and his poem lives, as all true poetry does, by the spirit rather than by the letter." But is it best to cloak these faults ? Is it not better to say that Milton's work has lived in spite of, rather than because of, them ? The highest art assuredly excludes them, and in Milton's finest passages there are no blemishes of any sort. 2-3 41-44, 57-76. With these lines Van Dyke compares the last seventeen lines of the fourth stanza of Tennyson's Ode to Memory, and observes : " Here are the same breadth of vision, delicacy of touch, atmospheric effect ; the same sensitiveness to the simplest variations of light and sound ; the same power to shed over the quiet scenery of the English country the light of an ideal beauty. It is an art far beyond that of the landscape painter, and all the more perfect because so well concealed." — Poetry of Tennyson (sec. ed.), p. 62. 2 42. The dull night. Cf. Hen. V. iv. 1. 11. One editor notes that II Penseroso could not have used the epithet dull so appropriately as L' Allegro. Why not ? 2 43. From his watch-tower. " The lark sees the dawn sooner than the dull night which grovels on the earth, because he is high up in his ' watchtower ' " (Elton). Is -tower one or two syllables here ? NOTES. 63 2 44. The dappled dawn. Cf. Much Ado v. 3. 25-27. Pronounce dappled. 2 45. Then to come, etc. This passage is obscure. (1) It may mean that the lark is to come to L'Allegro's window and bid him " good-morrow." In this case we must make to come and bid depend on to hear (41), and suppose that the unusual to before come is made nec- essary by the distance between it and the governing verb. But such a construction is awkward. The interpretation, moreover, forces us to make the phrase in spite of sorrow almost meaningless by applying it to the lark ; it makes it difficult, to account for L' Allegro seeing the per- formance of the cock described below (51-52) ; and, finally, obliges us to suppose Milton ignorant of the lark's habits, since the bird never approaches human habitations, — an ignorance we are not justified in assuming if the passage can be explained in some other way. (2) Another interpretation makes to come and bid depend on admit (38). " Awakened by the' lark, the poet, after listening to that early song, arises to give a blithe good-morrow at his window. Other matin sounds are heard, and he goes forth," etc. (Browne). Those who adopt this view explain that he bids " good-morrow " to " the rising morn," " the new day," or " the world in general." (3) Masson, how- ever, thinks that L' Allegro is already out of doors. " Milton, or who- ever the imaginary speaker is, asks Mirth to admit him to her company and that of the nymph Liberty, and to let him enjoy the pleasures nat- ural to such companionship (38-40). He then goes on to specify such pleasures, or to give examples of them. The first (41-44) is that of the sensations of early morning, when, walking round a country cottage, one hears the song of the mounting skylark, welcoming the signs of sunrise. The second is that of coming to the cottage window, looking in, and bidding a cheerful good-morrow, through the sweet-briar, vine, or eglantine, to those of the family who are also astir." This last interpretation is perhaps more in keeping with the good-hearted socia- bility of L' Allegro's character. But see Pattison, Milton, p. 23. 2 45. In spite of sorrow. Out of spite towards sorrow. In spite of usually means " notwithstanding " ; see Schmidt. Masson hints at " a subtle reference to some recent grief that had been in the special cottage in view." 2 47-48. Sweet-briar . . . eglantine. " As these are now, with strict botanists, names for the same plant [Rosa rubigenosa), Warton supposes that by ' the twisted eglantine ' Milton meant the honeysuckle ; Mr. Keightley, more accurately, suggests the dog-rose {Rosa canind). 64 NOTES. . . . Popularly, several of the smaller-flowered kinds of wild-rose, besides the sweet-briar, are still called eglantine" (Masson). "A close observer of things around us would not speak of the eglantine as twisted " (Pattison). 2 50. Scatters the rear, etc. Name and explain the figure. What does thin limit? 3 52. Stoutly struts, etc. What does Milton try to effect by the rhythm of this line? Contrast with that of 1. 51. 3 53. Oft listening, etc. The bounds of the poet's pleasures now begin to enlarge. Pronounce listening, slumbering (54). 3 55. Some hoar hill. Can you think of more than one meaning for the epithet hoar ? 3 56. The high wood. Explain. LI. 55-56 "may mean either that the music of hound and horn echoes shrill through the high wood on the hillside, or that the huntsmen and dogs begin on the hillside and then go ' echoing ' through the ' high wood.' . . . The latter interpre- tation seems the more poetical, as the elements of time and motion are introduced ; it also throws an ictus on ' high ' that improves the verse metrically " (Trent). 3 57. Walking, not unseen. " Happy men love witnesses of their joy : the splenetic love solitude " (Hurd, quoted by Todd). Contrast // P. 65. Browne reminds us that " Some particulars of the following description of morning are taken from Browne's Britannia's Pastorals (Book IV, v. 75)." 3 59. The eastern gate. Cf. M. N. D. hi. 2. 391. Right against, etc., modifies walking, and implies that L'Allegro has his course directed toward the rising sun. Elton comments on " the magnificent sound " of 11. 59-62. " Milton once or twice in these two poems," he says, " seems to quit the tone of gracious fantasy which he has laid down for them, and to ' somewhat loudly sweep the string.' But the fanciful word ' liveries ' brings him back again." 3 60. His state. " His stately progress " (Keightley), referring of course to the gorgeousness of the spectacle. 3 62. In thousand liveries dight. " Liveries seems to be plainly used of the clouds because they are regarded as servants or attendants of the sun, not because of the various hues displayed " (Trent). Look up the history of the word, and cf. M. of V. ii. 1. 2. Dight, arrayed. Cf II P. 159. Explain the figure in thousand. 3 65-68. And the milkmaid, etc. What do you notice about the movement of these lines ? How is this effect secured ? NOTES. 65 3 67. Tells his tale. Counts the number of his sheep (Warton, on the suggestion of Headley). For tell meaning "count," and tale mean- ing " number," see Psalm xlviii. 12, Exodus v. 8, though it must be con- fessed that when tell and tale are combined, as in the present passage, "the almost invariable meaning is to narrate something" (Keightley). In view of this last fact, tells his tale is also interpreted as " relates his story," — tale being taken either in the general sense of "any story" or in the particular sense of " a love-tale." " But (1) this [particular sense] would be a somewhat abrupt use of the word tale. (2) The every shows that some piece of business is meant. (3) The context too shows that. (4) The early dawn is scarcely the time for love- making. Some of these objections, but not all, are obviated by tak- ing tale in a general sense " (Hales). Do you think of any modern uses of the words tell and tale which help to explain the passage ? 3 69. Straight. Straightway. These new pleastires belong to a later hour than those described in the preceding lines. Of 11. 69-80 Palgrave writes : " This is perhaps as near a landscape in words — and those words always the words — as one can find anywhere : Nature by herself, no sympathy with man suggested ; Yet note how the one final imaginative phrase in its utter loveliness transports us at once within the sphere of human feeling." — See Landscape in Poetry, pp 158-159. 3 70. Landskip. The first and second editions have lantskip (Masson). Read this line so as to show the antecedent of it. What does round limit ? 3 71. Russet lawns, etc. " Lawn now commonly means a stretch of green grass in front of a mansion ; but the epithet ' russet ' (reddish) shows that Milton . . . understood it rather in its original sense of land or laund, any open space, even if moory. . . . A fallow is a piece of ploughed land left unsown " (Masson). Verity has a long note in which he tries to show that russet lawns and fallows grey " mean much the same thing, and that Milton is thinking of the ' ash-coloured ' appearance presented by a hill-side where the grass is short and poor of quality." With what are lawns, fallows, mountains, etc., in apposition ? 3 73. Mountains. See Milton 's Poetical Works (Masson), Vol. I. pp. 132-133, for a splendid comment on the visionary scenery of VAl. and 77 P. There are no mountains in the vicinity of Horton, where Milton probably wrote these poems. 3 74. Labouring clouds. Why the epithet ? 3 75. Meadows trim, etc. For trim, cf II P. 50, C. 120 ; for daisies 66 NOTES. pied, see the fine lines in Z. Z. Z. v. 2. 904-907. Note the position of the adjectives in 11. 71, 75, 76, 126, etc. 3 77. Towers and battlements. These, says Masson, " are almost evidently Windsor Castle." 3 79. Lies. Lodges, dwells ; cf Cor. i. 9. 82. 3 80. Cynosure. An object to which all eyes are turned ; a meta- phorical meaning. The word (which literally means " dog's tail," Kvvbs ovpa) was anciently applied to that part of the Lesser Bear which contains the pole-star, because it was- then thought that constellation resembled a dog. It was by this constellation that the Phoenician mariners steered their course, while the Greek mariners steered by the Greater Bear. Cf. C. 341-342. 4 83-8S. Corydon and Thyrsis . . . Phillis . . . Thestylis. Names of frequent occurrences in pastoral poetry, here applied, somewhat incon- gruously perhaps, to English rustics. Note the time of day indicated in these lines. 4 89. If the earlier season lead. Lead is probably used intransi- tively. She goes may be understood with 1. 90. 4 90. Tanned haycock. Why tanned? 4 91. Secure. Not "safe," but "free from care" (Latin securus). Browne quotes Ben Jonson, Epode : " Men may securely sin, but safely never." Here, as in 1. 69, the scene is shifted and a new paragraph begun. 4 92. Upland hamlets. " Little villages among the slopes, away from the river-meadows and the haymaking" (Masson). Contrast towered cities, 117. 4 94. Rebeck. " A loud and harsh lute-shaped medieval musical instrument, the earliest form of the violin, with one, two, or three strings, and played with a bow " {Stand. Diet). For some interesting facts about the instrument, see Verity. It may be worth noting that Shakspere calls one of the musicians in R. and J. (iv. 5. 135) Hugh Rebeck. What is really jocund ? 4 96. Chequered shade. Explain ; cf. T. A. ii. 3. 15. 4 97. Come. What part of the verb ? 4 98. Sunshine holiday. Cf. C. 959. 4 100. Spicy nut-brown ale. Hales thinks with Warton that this is the " gossips' bowl " of Shakspere {cf M. JV. D. ii. 1. 47), a drink made up of " ale, nutmeg, sugar, toast, and roasted crabs or apples." 4 102. Mab. See the description of her in R. and f. i. 4. 53-95 ; also the one in Ben Jonson's The Satyr. Junkets, sweetmeats, dainties. NOTES. 67 Originally the word (from Ital. guincatd) meant " a cream cheese," so called because it was served on rushes (Ital. guinco, a rush). " Of course Queen Mab eat the junkets to punish the inmates of the house for untidiness " (Verity). 4 103. She. One of the persons telling stories. She relates an experience she has had with the fairies, who pinched and pulled her, it may be, for untidy work. 4 104. And he, etc. And he, i.e., the one who had once been led by the Friar's lantern, tells how, etc. A second interpretation connects 1. 104 with 1. 103 : She said she was pinched and pulled, and he said he was led by Friar's lantern. L. 105 would then begin a new story, the verb tells having for its subject he understood. Browne suggests " a colon at led and would read Tales for Tells in line 105, thus carrying on the sense from stories (line 101) to tales (line 105)." If the reading in the second edition, And by the Friar's lajztern led, were adopted, the speaker throughout would be the same, i.e., she in 1. 103. The latter is defended by Verity ; to me, however, the first interpretation seems the most natural. 4 104. Friar's lantern. Keightley, followed by several editors, charges Milton with having confused two different spirits ; Friar Rush, the house-spirit, and Will-o'-the-Wisp or Jack-o'-the-Lanthorn, the field- spirit. But Verity says : " It is possible however that Milton is not referring to either spirit, but that friar of 1. 104 is identical with the goblin {i.e., Robin Goodfellow) of 1. 105. For two reasons : (i) friar was a title of Robin Goodfellow. . . . (ii) The trick of misleading with a false light was not confined to Jack-o'-the-Lanthorn." 4 105. Drudging goblin. Robin Goodfellow, the Puck of Shakspere. A comparison of Milton's lines with Shakspere's description of Puck in M. N. D. ii. 1. 42-57, however, will show that the two poets had quite different conceptions of the sprite. For an extended account of the pranks of Robin Goodfellow, consult Keightley, Fairy Mythology, or Brand, Popular Antiquities of Great Britain. 4 111. Chimney. Fireplace. 4 113. Crop-full. With full stomach ; see 106. Flings, dashes. 5 114. Matin. Cf P. L. v. 7. 5 115. To bed they creep. Why creep ? 5 117. Towered cities please us then. " The rest of the poem, from this point onward, may be taken as describing the evening reveries, readings, and other recreations, of the imaginary youth in his country- cottage, after his morning's walk and afternoon among the rustics. 63 NOTES. The word then in this line, as elsewhere in the poem, does important duty " (Masson). But Hales says : "then (not when the tales are over and the tellers in bed, but) = at some other time. He is not describ- ing one long day, but the pleasure which one day or another might entertain L'Allegro." Verity follows Hales, and supposes that L' Allegro "actually takes part in these gay meetings and festivities" (i 17-134). For a good defense of Masson's interpretation, however, see Trent. Note the new turns given the thought in 11. 131 and 135. 5 120. Weeds. Garments ; the original meaning of the word. Cf. C. 16, 189, 390. Triumphs, "a public festivity or exhibition of any kind, particularly a tournament " (Schmidt). In Bacon's Essay Of Masques and Triumphs, there is the following treatment of triumphs: " For justs, and tourneys, and barriers, the glories of them are chiefly in the chariots, wherein the challengers make their entry, especially if they be drawn with strange beasts, as lions, bears, camels, and the like ; or, in the devices of their entrance, or in bravery of their liveries, or in the goodly furniture of their horses and armour." 5 121. Store of. Plenty of, many. 5 122. Rain influence. Influence here refers to the astrological belief that the stars have an occult power over the affairs of men ; in this case, of course, the eyes of the ladies are compared to stars. Cf Nat. 71. Explain the construction in 122-123. 5 125. Hymen. Warton refers to Ben Jonson's Masque, Hymenal: " On the other hand, entered Hymen (the god of marriage) in a saffron- colour'd robe, his under vestures white, his socks yellow, a yellow veil of silk on his left arm, his head crowned with roses and marjoram, in his right hand a torch of pine-tree." See last scene of A. Y. L. 5 127. Pomp. "A festival procession" (Schmidt). Revelry; Min- sheu defines revels as " sports of dauncing, masking, comedies, tragedies, and such like, used in the king's house, the houses of court, or of other great personages " (quoted by Todd). 5 128. With mask and antique pageantry. Explain. 5 130. Haunted. " By the water-nymphs " (Verity). 5 131-134. Then to the well-trod stage, etc. " In those days Milton had no more of the Puritanic aversion to the theatre . . . than to the pomps and solemnities of cathedral ritual." — Garnett, Milton, p. 45. Cf. II P. 155-166. 5 132. Jonson's learned sock. The sock (Latin soccus, the low-heeled shoe or slipper worn by comic actors in the ancient Greek and Roman drama) is here used for " comedy," just as the buskined stage (the buskin NO TES. 69 was the high-heeled boot worn by ancient tragic actors) is used in 77 P. (102) for "tragedy." At the time VAl. was written, Jonson was poet laureate, and had finished most of the work which entitled him to his high rank among the giants of the Elizabethan age. No characteristic is so generally accorded to him as that of learning, and hence Milton's adjective is as appropriate as Chaucer's "moral Gower " (Troilus v. 1856). What the poet says of Shakspere, however, is not so well put. It is all well enough to speak of the man as sweetest Shakespeare, for he was both the gentlest and the sweetest of mankind, and, taking Fancy in the larger meaning it x then had, even Fancy's child may be admitted, but to characterize Shakspere's comedies (I see no reason for suppos- ing that Milton is referring to only a part of them) as " native wood- notes wild," is to accord to him praise that is altogether inadequate. Despite what has been said by critics in favor of the present passage, and despite the lines On Shakespeare (1630), in which he praises principally the dramatist's spontaneity, both his sneer at Charles I. for reading Shakspere (see Eikonoklastes) and his Preface to S. A. justify us in doubting whether Milton at any time in his life actually appreciated the real greatness of Shakspere. Milton's lines On Shakespeare, which should be compared with Jonson's tributes in the First Folio and Ti?nber, are as follows: " What needs my Shakespeare for his honoured bones The labour of an age in piled stones ? Or that his hallowed reliques should be hid Under a star-ypointing pyramid ? Dear son of memory, great heir of fame, What need'st thou such weak witness of thy name ? Thou in our wonder and astonishment Hast built thyself a livelong monument. For whilst, to the shame of slow-endeavouring art, Thy easy numbers flow, and that each heart Hath from the leaves of thy unvalued book Those Delphic lines with deep impression took, Then thou, our fancy of itself bereaving, Dost make 11s marble with too much conceiving, And so sepulchred in such pomp dost lie That kings for such a tomb would wish to die/' 5 135. Eating cares. Cf. Horace's mordaces sollicitudines {Odes i. 18. 4) and curas edaces {Odes ii. 11. 18). Contrast 11. 135-150 with II F. 161-166. 70 NOTES. 5 136. Lydian airs. Music now takes the place of reading, and it is quite natural that L'Allegro should prefer the soft Lydian airs to the Dorian or the Phrygian. For the Dorian mood, see P. L. i. 550-559. 5 137. Married to immortal verse. Cf. the opening lines of At a Solemn Music ; also C. 516. The present passage is one among many in Milton's poems where music is " married to immortal verse." 5 139. Bout. Bend, turn ; sometimes used of a serpent's coils. How is the word now used ? On this and the following line, see Cole- ridge, Lectures and Notes on Shakspere (Bohn ed.), p. 49, Garnett, Milton, p. 156 et seq. 5 141. With wanton heed, etc. ' The adjectives describe the appearance, the nouns the reality" (Browne). The figure is an oxy- moron ; consult a dictionary and explain. 5 142. Melting voice. Why the epithet ? 5 144. The hidden soul, etc. "In every soul — indeed in all creation — there is harmony, but for the most part it lies imprisoned and bound, so that it cannot be heard. The sweetness of the music described in the text is to be such that it shall set free this prisoner, and make its voice audible " (Hales). 6 145. Orpheus. For the beautiful legend of Orpheus and Eurydice, see Class. Diet. Cf. LI P. 105-108, Lye. 58-63, P. L. vii. 34-37. 6 146. Golden slumber. Why is the epithet so effective ? 6 147. Elysian flowers. Cf. P. L. iii. 359. Where did ancient mythology locate the Elysian fields ? Which of these places best suits the present passage ? 6 149. To have quite set free. Why quite ? "In our older English writers, as in our modern colloquial language, the perfect infinitive is used to express a result or a purpose which has not been attained " (Hales). 6 151-152. These delights, etc. Cf the last two lines of Marlowe's exquisite lyric, The Passionate Shepherd to His Love : " If these delights thy mind may move, Then live with me, and be my love." Read Marlowe's poem, together with Sir Walter Raleigh's answer to the same, called The Nymph'' s Reply. NOTES. 71 IL PENSEROSO. 7 1. Hence, etc. Milton may have remembered the following lines from Sylvester, Tragedie of Henry the Great : " Hence, hence, false Pleasures, momentary Joyes : Mock us no more with your illuding Toyes." 7 2. Without father. " And therefore ' all mother,' as we say, or pure folly" (Rolfe). Cf the parentage given Melancholy in UAL 7 3. Bested. Bestead, help, avail ; cf. Shakspere's use of stead, R. and f. ii. 3. 54. 7 4. Fixed mind. Cf P. I. i. 97 ; F. Q. iv. 7. 16 : " Yet nothing could my fixed mind remove." Toys, trifles. 7 5. Idle brain. Opposed tofxed mind, above. Idle is here used in its original sense of " empty " (A. S. Idel) ; cf the use of the word in that fine Old English poem, The Wanderer, 87 : " eald ^nta geweorc Idlu stodon." 7 6. Fond. Foolish ; the meaning most common in Shakspere. See Schmidt ; cf C 67, Lye. 56, S. A. 812, etc. x7 7. As thick, etc. Cf Chaucer, Canterbury Tales, D. 868 : " As thikke as motes in the sonne-beem." 7 9. Likest. Explain the force of likest ; cf C 237. 7 10. Pensioners. Retinue ; this metaphorical use was given cur- rency, if it was not, as Warton suggests, originated by Queen Elizabeth's establishment of a select guard called Pensioners. Cf M. N. D. ii. 1. 10, M. W. ii. 2. 79. For Morpheus, see Class. Diet. 7 12. Melancholy. Here the word stands for " pensive contem- plation." 7 14. To hit. To meet, to agree with. 7 15. Our weaker view. Cf. Exodus xxxiv. 29-35. 7 IS. Prince Memnon's sister. Milton may refer to Hemera, men- tioned by Dictys Cretensis, De Bella Trojano, lib. vi. c. 10. As Odysseus describes Eurypylus as the comeliest man he ever saw, next to goodly Memnon (Keivov brj koWlgtov tdov [mcto. Mefxvova 8tov, Odys. xi. 522), the poet probably supposes that Memnon's sister, although we are nowhere so told, was no less beautiful. 7 19. Starred Ethiop queen. Cassiope, wife of Cepheus, and mother of Andromeda. In consequence of her boast (another story has it that she claimed her daughter was fairer than the Nereids), the nymphs 72 NOTES. sent a sea-monster to ravage the coast of Ethiopia, and Andromeda was about to be sacrificed to this monster when she was rescued by Perseus. As Cassiope was afterwards placed among the stars, Milton uses the epithet starred. See Class. Did. ; read Charles Kingsley's Andromeda. 7 23. Bright-haired Vesta. Milton again invents a genealogy to suit his own purposes. He perhaps regards Saturn as the type of Solitude, and Vesta as the type of Chastity, thus making Melancholy the daughter of Chastity and Solitude. Warton, however, identifies Vesta with Genius, and Browne supposes that Vesta, or Hestia, the goddess of the hearth, is here the symbol of Retirement, while Saturn, the promoter of civilization, represents Culture. For Saturn, see Class. Diet., and by all means read at least the opening lines of Keats's Hype- rion, — a poem which Shelley (Preface to Adonais) considered "as second to nothing that was ever produced by a writer of the same years." 8 29. Woody Ida. Probably the mountain of that name in the island of Crete is meant. Cf. P. L. i. 515. 8 30. No fear of Jove. Jupiter led in the dethronement of his father. See Class. Diet. ; also on C 20. What is the force of yet in this line ? What other meanings has it ? 8 32. Demure. See the first of the two meanings in Stand. Diet. Contrast this line with VAl. 24. 8 33. All in a robe, etc. All may be either an adjective or an ad- verb. Grain, dye, color, not texture ; perhaps the color intended is dark purple. For a lengthy discussion of grain, see Marsh, Lectures on the English Language (First Series), and Masson's note to P. L. v. 285. Cf. C. 750, P. L. xi. 242. 8 35. Stole of cypress lawn. Stole, veil or hood (as in F. Q. i. 1. 4) ; note the stola, or long, flowing robe of the Roman lady. Cypress lawn, crape ; but the words are usually distinguished, as in W. T. iv. 4. 220-221. 8 36. Decent. Probably the word here means " comely," " hand- some," though Warton (quoted by Todd) explains it as " Not exposed, therefore decent ; more especially, as so covered." In the Deserted Village, 12, Goldsmith has : "The decent church that topt the neigh- bouring hill." 8 37. Thy wonted state. State, dignity of deportment. Warton quotes Ben Jonson, Cynthia's Revels, v. 3 : " Seated in thy silver chair, State in wonted manner keep." NOTES. 73 8 39. Commercing. Having intercourse ; perhaps, communing. 8 42. Forget thyself to marble. See the lines On Shakespeare, quoted in note to L'Al. 132. "In both instances, excess of thought is the cause " (Warton, quoted by Todd). 8 43. Sad leaden downward cast. Sad, grave, serious ; cf. C. 1S9. " Leaden-coloured eye-sockets betoken melancholy, or excess of thought- fulness " (Masson) ; Verity interprets leaden as "gloomy" and Trent thinks it refers " not to color . . . but to weight or heaviness." Verity compares Sylvester, Du Bartas (Grosart, i. 155): " That swallow-fac't, sad, stooping Nymph, whose eye Still on the ground is fixed stedfastly." 8 44. As fast. That is, as fast as they were before fixed on the skies. 8 46-48. Spare Fast, etc. Cf. Milton's Elegia Sexta 55-66. Here is Masson's translation: " Ay, but whoso will tell of wars and the world at its grandest, Heroes of pious worth, demigod leaders of men, Singing now of the holy decrees of the great gods above us, Now of the realms deep down, guarded by bark of the dog, Sparely let such an one still, in the way of the Samian master, Live, and let homely herbs furnish his simple repast ; Near him, in beechen bowl, be only the crystal-clear water ; Sober draughts let him drink, fetched from the innocent spring-, Added to this be a youth of conduct chaste and reproachless, Morals rigidly strict, hands without sign of a stain : All as when thou, white-robed, and lustrous with waters of cleansing, Risest, augur, erect, fronting the frown of the gods." The idea which pervades these lines Masson calls "an eminently Mil- tonic idea, perhaps pre-eminently the Miltonic idea." He cites C. 783-789 and a famous passage in the prose Apology for Smectymnuns, where it occurs again. 8 47. Muses. For the names and the attributes of the nine Muses, see Class. Diet. 8 50. Trim gardens. Cf. VAl. 75; also C. 375-380. "Mr. Warton here observes, that affectation and false elegance were now carried to the most elaborate and absurd excess in gardening" (Todd). At this day we prefer the sort of gardens described in P. L. iv. 241-246, where 74 NOTES. " not nice Art In beds and curious knots, but Nature boon Poured forth profuse on hill, and dale, and plain, Both where the morning sun first warmly smote The open field, and where the unpierced shade Imbrowned the noontide bowers." 8 52. Golden wing. Cf. C. 214, Death of a Fair Infant 57. Verity reminds us that Sylvester had previously applied the epithet to Sleep (Grosart, i. 143). 8 54. The Cherub Contemplation. See Ezekiel x. (also i.), and P. L. vi. 749-759- As Verity remarks, "It is well to remember two things: (i) Cherub . . . means a single member of the cherubim. . . . (ii) When- Milton applies to the Cherub the title Contemplation ... he is referring to the mediaeval conception of the Hierarchies. . . . According to it each of the Orders or Choirs into which the heavenly beings were divided had a special power, and the faculty peculiar to the Cherubim w r as that of ' Knowledge and Contemplation of divine things.' . . . Milton took the mediaeval belief and grafted it on to the narrative of Ezekiel." The meter requires five syllables for Contemplation ; see Browne's Notes on Shakspere's Versification (Ginn & Company), third edition, p. 18, an excellent little pamphlet to use as an introduction to the study of versi- fication. See Modern Language Notes, Vol. XIV. pp. 78-79, for a sum- mary of Professor Tolman's paper on " The Poetic Value of Long Words." 8 55. The mute Silence hist along. That is, bid the mute Silence come along by whispering hist. Hist, originally an onomatopoeic inter- jection used to enforce silence, is here probably an imperative, although Skeat takes it as a past participle, i.e., " bring along with thee the mute, hushed Silence." Masson paraphrases : " Move through the mute Silence hushingly, or saying Hush ! — i.e., telling the Silence to continue — unless the nightingale shall choose to break it by one of her songs." As Silence is personified, there is no tautology in adding the epithet mute. Read Tennyson's Reticence, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Vol. II. pp. 87-88. 8 56. 'Less Philomel, etc. Unless the nightingale will grant a song. For the story of Philomela, see Class. Diet., and for the finest of all the tributes in the English language to the nightingale, read Keats's Ode to a Nightingale. 8 57. Plight. Define. 9 58. Smoothing, etc. Cf C. 251. 9 59. Cynthia. See Class. Diet.; in ancient mythology it was Ceres whose chariot was drawn by dragons. NOTES. 75 9 60. The accustomed oak. Explain. 9*61. Sweet bird, etc. See Milton's sonnet to the nightingale, C. 234, 566, P. L. iii. ■$, iv. 602, 771, vii. 435. Coleridge, in his To the Nightingale, quoted 1. 62. 9 63-72. Thee, chauntress, etc. After quoting UAL 69-80 and 77 P. 63-72, Palgrave observes : " What we gain from Milton, as these speci- mens in his very purest vein — his essence of landscape — illustrate, is the immense enlargement, the finer proportions, the greater scope, of his scenes from Nature. And with this we have that exquisite style, always noble, always music itself — Mozart without notes — in which Milton is one of the few very greatest masters in all literature : in company — at least it pleases me to fancy — with Homer and Sophocles, with Vergil, with Dante, with Tennyson." — See Landscape in Poetry, pp. 158-159. 9 64. Even-song. Contrast UAL 114. 9 65. Unseen. Contrast UAL 57. From the fact that unseen is neg- atived in UAL, some have supposed that II P. may have been written first. The probability is, however, that the two poems were conceived at the same time and written in their present order. After quoting 11. 65- 94, Blair says: "Here there are no unmeaning general expressions; all is particular, all is picturesque ; nothing forced or exaggerated ; but a simple style, and a collection of strong expressive images, which are all of one class, and recall a number of similar ideas of the melancholy kind: . . . We may observe, too, the conciseness of the poet's manner. He does not rest long on one circumstance, or employ a great many words to describe it ; which always makes the impression faint and languid ; but placing it in one strong point of view, full and clear before the reader, he then leaves it." — Hugh Blair, Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres, Lecture xl. 9 67. The wandering moon. Keightley cites Horace, Sat. i. 8.. 21 : vaga luna, and Virgil, ALn. i. 742 : errantem lunam. If Shakspere were living at this hour, he might find reason to congratulate himself on the fact that he did not know much Latin. At any rate, no one thinks of accusing him of borrowing his wandering moon (cf. M. N. D. iv. 1. 102 ; also ii. 1. 6-7) from Virgil or Horace. See what Stedman says about imaginative diction, Nature and Elements of Poetry, p. 240 et sea. 9 68. Her highest noon. Explain. 9 72. Stooping, etc. What optical illusion is referred to ? 9 74. Curfew. " A regulation in force in mediaeval Europe by which at a fixed hour in the evening, indicated by the ringing of a bell, fires were to be covered over or extinguished; . . . Hence, the practice of 76 NOTES. ringing a bell at a fixed hour in the evening, usually eight or nine o'clock, continued after the original purpose was obsolete, and often used as a signal in connection with various municipal or communal regulations ; the practice of ringing the evening bell still survives in many towns " {New Eng. Diet.). Look up etymology of word. See on Lye. 154. 9 75. Some wide-watered shore. Explain. We have here one of Milton's finest double epithets, the construction and use of which is common in his early poems. " In Covins, which has a few more than a thousand lines, there are fifty-four double epithets ; in V Allegro there are sixteen to a hundred and fifty lines ; in 77 Penseroso there are eleven to one hundred and seventy lines." — Van Dyke, Poetry of Tennyson (sec- ond edition), p. 64. Coleridge, who was of the opinion that there is a superfluity of double epithets in the early poetry of both Shakspere and Milton, gave the following rule for their admission: "either that they should be already denizens of our language, such as blood-stained, terror- stricken, self-applauding ; or when a new epithet, or one found in books only, is hazarded, that it, at least, be one word, not two words made one by mere virtue of the printer's hyphen. ... If a writer, every time a com- pounded word suggests itself to him, would seek for some other mode of expressing the same sense, the chances are always greatly in favour of his finding a better word." — Biographia Literaria (Bohn ed.), p. 2, note. 9 76. Swinging slow, etc. What poetic effect do you notice in this line ? 9 77. Or, if the air, etc. In UAL the evening indoors did not begin until 1. 117. 9 78. Removed. Remote; cf Ham. i. 4. 61. 9 80. Teach light, etc. A gloom which only Rembrandt could paint. Cf. the famous passage in P. L. i. 62-64, and the hardly less famous one in F. Q.'\. 1. 14 : " But forth unto the darksom hole he went, And looked in : his glistring armor made A little glooming light, much like a shade." 9 82. The cricket on the hearth. A line made famous by Dickens. It is now no uncommon thing for an author to find a title for his book in some odd phrase of the old poets ; Mr. Howells, for instance, found one in Lye. 188. 9 83. The bellman's drowsy charm. The bellman was a night watchman who went his round ringing a bell and crying the time, the NOTES. 77 weather, and so on. Some idea of the drowsy charm may be had from Herrick's poem in the Hesperides (Grosart, ii. 2S) : I " From noise of Scare-fires rest ye free, From Murders Benedicitie. From all mischances, that may fright Your pleasing slumbers in the night : Mercie secure ye all, and keep The Goblin from ye, while ye sleep. Past one aclock, and almost two, My Masters all, Good day to you." 9 S4. Nightly. " During the night, not night by night " (Hales). 9 85. Or let my lamp, etc. Here II Penseroso passes to the study of literature, — philosophy (S8-96), tragedy (97-102), lyric poetry (103-108), and romance (109-120). Compare L'Allegro's reading. This passage has been a good deal admired, because the poet imagines some far-off observer catching sight of the light gleaming from II Penseroso's tower. 9 87. Outwatch the Bear. " The Great Bear does not set below the horizon in northern latitudes, and only vanishes on account of the day- light " (Bell). Tennyson makes use of the same idea in his Princess, iv. 194-195: " I paced the terrace, till the Bear had wheel'd Thro' a great arc his seven slow suns." t 9 88. Thrice great Hermes. Hermes Trismegistus (i.e., thrice great- est) was the Egyptian Thoth, identified by the Greeks with their god Hermes or Mercury. He was regarded as the originator of Egyptian art, science, magic, alchemy, and religion, and the works attributed to him, but really written by the Neoplatonists of the fourth century of our era, were much studied. Read Longfellow's Hermes Trismegistus. 9-10 88-89. Unsphere the spirit of Plato. Draw down the spirit of Plato from the sphere in which it now dwells, or, to discard the figure, find out by intense study the doctrine embodied in Plato's works. The particular allusion is to the PJuzdo and those other portions of Plato's works where the doctrine of immortality is treated. See on 85 ; cf. C. 2-4. 10 90. What worlds, etc. "Are not vast regions included in world?'''' (Landor). 10 93. And of those demons, etc. Explain the zeugma. What must be understood after And? As Keightley has observed, Plato speaks of the intelligences which he calls daimona, but the assignment 78 NOTES. to them of their abodes in the four elements over which they had power belongs to the later Platonists and to the writers of the middle ages. 10 95. Consent. " Sympathetic connexion " (Masson). 10 98. Sceptred pall. Either "royal robe" or "with sceptre and with pall" (Hales). 10 99-100. Presenting Thebes, etc. Milton here mentions the chief themes of Attic tragedy, having in mind particularly the dramas of ^schylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. For Thebes, etc., see Class. Diet., and for TEschylus, etc., consult some good history of Greek literature — Mahaffy's, if at hand. Presenting, representing; so frequently in Shakspere. 10 101-102. Or what, etc. In view of Milton's aversion to the romantic drama (see preface to S. A.), it may be that he has in mind here the tragedies of Ben Jonson, although it is to be hoped, as most editors think, that he includes those of Shakspere. For buskined, see on VAl. 132. 10 104. Musaeus. A mythical poet of Thrace, and according to some legends the son of Orpheus. See Class. Diet. " It is always to the poets of a primitive age, the bards, that [Milton] compares himself — to Homer, Tiresias, and the Hebrew prophets. Orpheus and Musaeus are the poets he would best like to see before him in his pensive hours. Now in those primitive times the poet was almost an officer of the state ; he was regarded with reverence, and classed with the priest or diviner. He sang in the halls of Grecian princes, and stirred up the warriors to emulate the great deeds of their fathers. In Palestine he assumed a still greater elevation, and, mixing the praises of virtue with exalted conceptions of God and of the national vocation, became what we call a prophet. This was the ideal of poetry which suited Milton." — Professor Seeley, Macmillaris Magazine, Vol. XIX. p. 410. See Pattison, Milton, pp. 183-184. 10 106. Warbled to the string. Cf. Arcades S7. 10 107. Iron tears. Explain. 10 109. Him that left half-told. Chaucer, who left The Squire's Tale unfinished. The characters and incidents mentioned in the follow- ing lines should be traced in the.-story itself and in Spenser's continu- ation of it (T. Q. iv. 2-3). 10 110. Cambuscan. Milton gives a wrong accentuation to this word. 10 113. Virtuous. "Powerful, efficacious by inherent qualities" (Schmidt). Cf. C 165, 621. For the properties of the ring, see The NOTES. 79 Squire's Tale (Skeat, Student's Chaucer) 146-155; for the glass, 132- 141 ; for the horse of brass, 115-131 ; and for the sword, which Milton does not mention, 156-167. 10 116. If aught else. "Whatever else"; "a Latinism " (Bell). Great bards ; Spenser, first of all, and then, perhaps, Boiardo, Ariosto, and Tasso. 11 120. Where more is meant, etc. That is, where there is an alle- gorical meaning, as in the F. Q. In Milton's time allegory was still highly prized, but now, although it is occasionally practised, as, for instance, in Tennyson's Idylls of the King, it is not so much thought of. The modern point of view is well expressed by Lowell, when he says that allegory " reverses the true office of poetry by making the real un- real. It is imagination endeavoring to recommend itself to the under- standing by means of cuts." — Works (Houghton), Vol. III. p. 362. " The true type of the allegory is the Odyssey, which we read without suspicion as pure poem, and then find a new pleasure in divining its double meaning, as if we somehow got a better bargain of our author than he meant to give us." — Ibid., Vol. IV. pp. 321-322. There is an allegory, by the way, in Milton's own Covins. 11 121. Thus, Night, etc. Landor thought this verse of ten sylla- bles " should be reduced to the ranks." He also noted the rhymes in 119-122. 11 122. Civil-suited. In plain civilian dress; cf. R. and f. iii. 2. 10-11. One of the "epithets which designate dresses and decoration ; of which epithets, it must be acknowledged, both Milton and Shakes- peare are unreasonably fond" (Landor). Contrast UAL 59-62. 11 123. Tricked. Adorned; cf Lye. 170. Trounced, with hair curled and plaited. 11 124. The Attic boy. Cephalus, who was loved by Aurora, the goddess of dawn. See Class. Diet. 11 125. Kerchieft. Look up the original meaning of the word, and note how this was lost thought of when handkerchief 'was formed. 11 126. Rocking. " An active verb : the shrill winds rock the house " (Elton). 11 127. Still. Gentle. 11 128. His. Its ; there is no personification here. At the time Milton wrote this poem, its was not yet well established. Shakspere used the word but ten times, and Milton only three times in his poetry and rarely in his prose. In Old English, or Anglo-Saxon, the personal pronouns were highly inflected, the following forms being used in the 80 NOTES. declension of the singular number of the nominative and genitive cases of the third person : Masc. Neut. Fem. Nom. he (he) hit heo, hie, hi Gen. his his hiere, hire, hyre For a long time his was used for the genitive of both the masculine and neuter genders ; its was afterwards formed from the nominative neuter by dropping the h and adding s, and served to relieve his of this double service. Throughout Milton's poems, therefore, the student should guard against finding personifications where none was intended by the poet. 11 130. Minute-drops. Explain. / 11 134. Brown. Dusky, dark ; see on Lye. 2. Sylvan, Sylvanus, a Latin divinity of the fields and forests, whom later writers identified with Pan and other deities. 11 135. Monumental oak. Not because the monuments in churches were often formed of carved oak (Keightley), but because the oak is monumental in the sense of " memorial, old, telling of bygone years " (Masson). Bpowne compares Tennyson's Talking Oak. Chaucer, and Spenser after him, speaks of the "builder oak." Pattison asks "if any single word can be found, equal to ' monumental ' in its power of sug- gesting to the imagination the historic oak of park or chase, up to the knees in fern, which has outlasted ten generations of men ; has been the mute witness of the scenes of love, treachery, or violence enacted in the baronial hall which it shadows and protects ; and has been so associated with man that it is now rather a column and memorial obelisk than a tree of the forest ? " — Milton, p. 24. 11 136. Where the rude axe, etc. Note the chiasmus. 11 140. Profaner. " Somewhat, or at all profane ; = profan-/^, if there were such a word " (Hales). 11 141. Day's garish eye. The sun; look up etymology and meaning of garish. Cf. C. 978, Lye. 26, F. Q. i. 3. 4 : " the great eye of heaven," and R. and J. iii. 2. 25. 11 142. Honeyed thigh. What does the bee actually carry on its thigh? But cf. Lye. 140. 11 145. Consort. Companionship, or, perhaps, concert. 11 146. Dewy-feathered Sleep. Why the epithet ? Cf. P. L. iv. 614. NOTES. 81 11 147-150. And let some strange, etc. Of all the interpretations of this difficult passage, Masson's seems the most reasonable : " ' Let some strange mysterious dream wave (i.e. move to and fro) at his (i.e. Sleep's) wings, in airy stream,' etc. Wave is a neuter verb here, as in Par. Lost, xii. 593." Lively, vivid. 12 151. Breathe. What part of the verb ? 12 153. To mortals good. Good to mortals; cf Lye. 184. 12 154. Genius of the wood. In Arcades, the Genius of the wood appears, and makes a long speech, in the course of which he explains his duties. 12 155-166. But let my due feet, etc. " Following his usual prac- tice Milton has combined into a single picture suggestions drawn from several sources. . . . Thus by selection he paints an aspect of the ideal life of the student, whether it be passed at the University or in the close of a cathedral. The lines show that in 1633 (or 1634) Milton was still in sympathy with the ritual of the Church, though he did not care to enter its ranks as a clergyman. But from the prose works written later on might be quoted passages that condemn, directly or indirectly, almost everything which he here approves " (Verity). 12 155. Due feet. Explain; cf. C. 12. 12 156. Cloister's pale. Enclosure of the cloister; cloister's being Warton's emendation for cloisters. Landor, however, preferred to keep the old reading, and to take pale as an adjective, an interpretation that can certainly be defended. The word order would then be one fre- quently used by Milton, and the obvious tautology in cloister's pale would be avoided. The latter, though, is got rid of in another way, by supposing that Milton had in mind a particular cloister, probably Cambridge. " Observe : only at this point of the poem is Penseroso in contact with his fellow-creatures. Throughout the rest he is solitary " (Masson). 12 157. And love. And let me love; strictly the subject of the verb is what? Embowed, arched. 12 158. Massy-proof. " Proof against the mass they have to sup- port " (Masson). But the first and second editions have massy proof which Bell interprets as " proof against the great weight of the stone roof, because they are massive"; Verity also prints massy proof and suggests that "proof may be a noun (in apposition to pillars), with the general sense ' solidity.' " No wonder Landor thought the word " an inelegant one, and, if a compound, compounded badly. It seems more applicable to castles, whose massiveness gave proof of resistance." 82 NOTES. 12 159. Storied windows. Windows of stained glass on which are pictured scenes from the Bible; cf. C 516. Dig/it; see on VAl. 62. 12 160. Casnting a dim, etc. " I question whether Milton ever saw any but the dingy pictures in the dusty windows of English cathedrals, imperfectly shown by the gray English daylight. He would else have illuminated that word ' dim ' with some epithet that should not chase away the dimness, yet should make it glow like a million of rubies, sapphires, emeralds, and topazes." — Hawthorne, Works (Houghton), Vol. VI. p. 351. Cf ibid., Vol. X. p. 278. At the time II P. was written, Milton had not visited Italy. See Verity's apposite quotation from More, Utopia. 12 161. The pealing organ. The favorite instrument of Milton, and on which his father, a noted musician in his time, taught him to play; cf. P. L. i. 708-709, xi. 558-563, Nat. 130. In the latter part of his Tract on Education (1644), he recommends that the time of students after exercise, and before and even after meat, be taken up " in recre- ating and composing their travailed spirits with the solemn and divine harmonies of music heard or learned, either whilst the skilful organist plies his grave and fancied descant in lofty fugues, or the whole sym- phony with artful and unimaginable touches adorn and grace the well- studied chords of some choice composer; sometimes the lute or soft organ-stop, waiting on elegant voices either to religious, martial, or civil ditties, which, if wise men and prophets be not extremely out, have a great power over dispositions and manners to smooth and make them gentle from rustic harshness and distempered passions." — Morley, English Prose Writings of Milton, p. 306. 12 164. As may. Such as may ; cf. Nat. 98. Eor the thought, see Vacation Exercise 33-35- 12 170. Spell. Note the meaning. 12 171. Shew. For pronunciation, cf. C. 994-997. 12 175-176. These pleasures, etc. Contrast L'Al. 1 51-152. NOTES. 83 COMUS. In order to appreciate Comus, it is necessary to know something of the circumstances under which the masque was produced. In the summer of 1631, the Earl of Bridgewater was made President of the Council of Wales and Lord Lieutenant of North and South Wales and of the counties on the Welsh border, although he did not go to Wales, it would seem, until the spring of 1633. In the fall of 1634 he was inaugurated with splendid ceremonies, and it was for this inauguration that Comus was written. The masque was performed at Ludlow Castle on Michaelmas night, Sept. 29, 1634, before the Earl of Bridgewater and his invited guests. Three of the parts were taken by the Earl's children, Lady Alice Edgerton taking the part of The Lady, and Viscount Brackley and Mr. Thomas Edgerton, the parts of The First and Second Brothers. The Attendant Spirit, afterward Thyrsis, was played by Lawes, who wrote the music for the occasion. Who took the parts of Comus and Sabrina, we do not know, although a good actor was needed for the former and a good singer for the latter. It is supposed that Milton wrote Comus early in 1634, so as to have it ready for the performance in the fall of that year. Three editions of the masque appeared in the poet's lifetime. The first of these was issued in 1637 by Lawes, and was published without Milton's name, although the motto on the title page — Eheu qicid volui miser mihi! floribus Austrum Perditus 1 — shows that his consent to the publication had been obtained. Milton himself published the poem in 1645 an< ^ I &73- ^ n addition to this, there are two MS. copies, — one called the Bridgewater MS., and the other, in Milton's own hand, called the Cambridge MS. In the anonymous edition of 1637, there appeared the following dedication, which was reprinted in the edition of 1645, but omitted in that of 1673 : " To the Right Honourable John, Lord Brackley, son and heir-apparent to the Earl of Bridgewater, etcp " My Lord, " This Poem, which received its first occasion of birth from yourself and others of your noble family, and much honour from your own person in the performance, now returns again to make a final dedication of itself to you. 1 Virgil, Eel. ii. 58-59. 84 NOTES. Although not openly acknowledged by the Author, yet it is a legitimate off- spring, so lovely and so much desired that the often copying of it hath tired my pen to give my several friends satisfaction, and brought me to a necessity of pro- ducing it to the public view, and now to offer it up, in all rightful devotion, to those fair hopes and rare endowments of your much-promising youth, which give a full assurance to all that know you of a future excellence. Live, sweet Lord, to be the honour of your name ; and receive this as your own from the hands of him who hath by many favours been long obliged to your most honoured Parents, and, as in this representation your attendant T/iyrsis, so now in all real ex- pression " Your faithful and most humble Servant, " H. LA WES." In the edition of 1645, Dut omitted from that of 1673, appeared "The Copy of a Letter written by Sir He)iry Wotton to the Author upon the following Poem" the first two paragraphs of which are as follows : " From the College, this 13 of April, 1638. " Sir, " It was a special favour when you lately bestowed upon me here the first taste of your acquaintance, though no longer than to make me know that I wanted more time to value it and to enjoy it rightly ; and, in truth, if I could then have imagined your farther stay in these parts, which I understood afterwards by Mr. H., I would have been bold, in our vulgar phrase, to mend my draught (for you left me with an extreme thirst), and to have begged your conversation again, jointly with your said learned friend, over a poor meal or two, that we might have banded together some good Authors of the ancient time ; among which I observed you to have been familiar. " Since your going, you have charged me with new obligations, both for a very kind letter from you dated the 6th of this month, and for a dainty piece of enter- tainment which came therewith. Wherein I should much commend the tragical part, if the lyrical did not ravish me with a certain Doric delicacy in your Songs and Odes, whereunto I must plainly confess to have seen yet nothing parallel in our language : Ipsa mollifies. But I must not omit to tell you that I now only owe you thanks for intimating unto me (how modestly soever) the true artificer. For the work itself I had viewed some good while before with singular delight ; having received it from our common friend Mr. R., in the very close of the late R.'s Poems, printed at Oxford ; whereunto it was added (as I now suppose) that the accessory might help out the principal, according to the art of Stationers, and to leave the reader con la bocca dolceP For the plot of Comus, Milton seems to have drawn upon several sources, besides those mentioned in the notes. There is a tradition that Alice Edgerton and her two young brothers actually got lost at NOTES. 85 night in Haywood Forest near Ludlow, that the sister became separated from the brothers, and that Milton based his masque upon this incident. But such a story might very easily have originated after the performance of Milton's Comus. On the other hand, it seems that Milton was in- debted for some hints regarding the character of Comus to Ben Jon- son's masque of Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue and to a Latin play called Comus, sive Phagesiposia Cimmeria : Somnium, by a Dutchman, Erycius Puteanus, whose real name W T as Hendrik van der Putten ; and for the plot itself to George Peele's comedy of The Old Wives'' Tale. For the study of the English masque in general, see Ward, History of English Dramatic Literature (last edition), Symonds, Shakspere's Predecessors in the English Drama, Verity, Milton's Arcades and Comus, Sorgel, Die Englische Maskenspiele, etc. 14 2. Mansion. Abiding-place; cf. II P. 92, John xiv. 2. 14 3. Insphered. See on // P. 8S-89. 14 4. Serene. Accented on the first syllable. A general rule of Shakspere's, and often of Milton's meter, is that " dissyllabic oxytonical adjectives and participles become paroxytonical before nouns accented on the first syllable " (Schmidt, p. 1413). See 11. 11, 37, 217, 273, etc. In the case of serene, however, Masson thinks he detects "a finer effect in the metrical liberty involved in the ordinary pronunciation." 14 5. Dim spot. Why dim ? 14 6. And, with. And where they, with ; see 11. 26, 198. 14 7. Pestered. Clogged, encumbered ; for the probable etymology of the word, see Skeat, Etym. Diet. Pinfold, " an enclosure for animals ; especially, a cattle-pound " (Stand. Diet.). 14 9. The Crown that Virtue gives. Cf. Rev. iv. 4. 14 10. After this mortal change. After the change that comes to all mortals, i.e., death; Bell quotes Job xiv. 14. But Masson thinks it means " this mortal state of life," " this variation of our condition," or, as Rolfe puts it, "After the changes of this mortal life, or this mortal life of change "; Browne, on the other hand, says that change " here has its old meaning of a figure in a dance." Cf. Shelley, Adonais 71-72 : " till darkness and the law Of change shall o'er his sleep the mortal curtain draw." 14 11. Enthroned. Two syllables, with the first accented; cf Rev. iv. 4. 14 12. Be. Indicative here. 14 13. Golden key. Cf. Lye. no-in, Matt. xvi. 19. 86 NOTES. 14 16. Ambrosial weeds. Heavenly garments ; cf. 83. For weeds, see on UAL 120; also C. 189, 390. 14 19. Every . . . each. Every . . . every, or each . . . each are more usual; but cf. C. 311, Lye. 93. 14 20. Took in by lot, 'twixt high and nether Jove. The allusion is to the division of rule among Saturn's three sons, Pluto, Neptune, and Jupiter. In the Iliad, xv. 190 et sea., Neptune says to Iris: "For three brethren are we, and sons of Kronos, whom Rhea bare, Zeus, and myself, and Hades is the third, the ruler of the folk in the under-world. And in three lots are all things divided, and each drew a domain of his own, and to me fell the hoary sea, to be my habitation for ever, when we shook the lots : and Hades drew the murky darkness, and Zeus the wide heaven, in clear air and clouds, but the earth and high Olympus are yet common to all " (Lang, Leaf, and Myers). High and nether Jove (the designation is not original with Milton) are of course Jupiter and Pluto. On the punctuation of the line, see Masson. 14 22. Like to rich and various gems. "A noticeable fact about the similes [in Milton's poetry] involving nature is the frequency with which the nature element appears on the wrong side of the comparison; that is, instead of using a natural object to explain or illustrate some- thing artificial or human, these elements are inverted. . . . The fact that the artificial object is thus enlployed doubtless indicates that, in the writer's opinion, it was more familiar or more beautiful than the nat- ural object which it is supposed to explain or heighten." — V. P. Squires, Mod. Lang. Notes, Vol. IX. p. 234. 14 23. Unadorned. " How can a bosom be unadorned which already is inlaid with gems ? " (Landor). 15 24. His tributary gods. Explain. 15 25. Several. Separate. 15 27. This Isle. Great Britain ; by all means read Shakspere's description of "this scepter'd isle " in Rich. II. ii. 1. 40 et seq. 15 29. Quarters. Divides into four parts ; there were then four separate governments in Great Britain, which were located at London and Edinburgh, and in Wales and the northern counties of England (Keightley). This interpretation seems to be supported by this tract (30). Blue-haired deities ; the English people, because, as Masson sug- gests, there is "a recollection of 'blue' as the British colour, inher- ited from the old times of the blue-stained Britons who fought with Caesar." On the other hand, qicarters to may be taken in the general sense of " divides among," and blue-haired deities may be nothing but a NOTES. 87 variation of tributary gods (24) or possibly a special section of them. The epithet blue-haired might then be justified because " Ovid ex- pressly calls the sea-deities caerulei dii, and Neptune caeruleus deus, thus associating blue with the sea " (Bell), and because " from the stage- directions in other Masques it may be inferred that convention associ- ated hair of this hue with the deities of the sea " (Verity). Against this interpretation, however, it may be urged that " green-haired " " is the usual poetic epithet for Neptune and his subordinates " (Masson), and that blue-haired deities " must be distinct from the tributary gods who wield their little tridents (line 27), otherwise the thought would ill accord with the complimentary nature of lines 30-36 " (Bell). 15 30. This tract. Wales. 15 31. A noble peer. The Earl of Bridgewater, Viceroy of Wales, who was present at the performance. This is but one of the many compliments which the poet contrives to pay throughout the poem, which the student may search out for himself. 15 33. An old and haughty nation, etc. A tribute justified by the history of the Welsh people. 15 36. New-intrusted. The Earl, however, had received his appoint- ment as early as the summer of 1631. 15 37. Perplexed. Entangled ; see on 4. 15 38. The nodding horror, etc. Think out and explain the figure. 15 41. Quick command. Explain. 15 45. In hall and bower. The bower was "An inner apartment, esp. as distinguished from the ' hall,' or large public room, in ancient man- sions " [New Eng. Diet.). Scott uses the phrase as the equivalent of " among men or women," since the hall of the lord was often distin- guished from the bower of the lady. 15 46. Bacchus. See Class. Diet. ; Trent refers to Walter Pater's Greek Studies. 15 4S. After the Tuscan mariners transformed. After the Tuscan mariners had been transformed. The construction is a Latin one ; cf. P. L. i. 573, v. 248, etc., Cicero, Phil. iii. 9 : tarn a condita tirbe, " even from the founding of the city." The story of the mariners who seized Bacchus, and were by him changed into dolphins, is told in the Homeric Hymn to Dionysos and Ovid's Met. iii. 660 et sea.; but see Class. Diet. 15 49. As the winds listed. Cf. John iii. 8. 15 50. Circe's island. JExa., off the coast of Latium. For the story of Ulysses's visit to Circe, see Odyssey x. On . . . fell; cf. the Latin phrase, incidere in. Note the anadiplosis in this line. 88 NOTES. 15 51. Daughter of the Sun. Browne, in his Inner Temple Masque, had called Circe " daughter to the Sun." Charmed cup illustrates what figure ? 16 58. Comus. This genealogy, as well as the idea of bringing Bacchus to Circe's island, is Milton's own invention. Comus (Greek KUfios) means a "revel," "carousal," "merrymaking." If the first gene- alogy given to Mirth in VAl. 14-24 be accepted, Comus is the half- brother of Mirth, she representing Pleasure on the innocent side, and he on the sensual side. 16 59. Frolic. See on UAL 18. Of, because of. 16 60. Celtic and Iberian fields. France and Spain. Why appro- priate for Comus ? 16 61. Ominous. A dissyllable here; cf. 205-209. 16 65. Orient. Bright ; cf. P. L. i. 545-546. Trent, however, thinks Milton may have intended " a partial reference to the eastern drugs and poisons familiar in literature." 16 66. Drouth of Phoebus. Drought of Phoebus, i.e., thirst caused by the heat of the sun. 16 67. Fond. Foolish ; see on // P. 6. 16 69. The express resemblance of the gods. Cf. Genesis i. 26-27. 16 72. All other parts, etc. This is a deviation from the account given by Homer. Cf. the Odyssey x. 237-240 : " Now when she had given them the cup and they had drunk it off, presently she smote them with a wand, and in the styes of the swine she penned them. So they had the head and voice, the bristles and the shape of swine, but their mind abode even as of old " (Butcher and Lang). Why did Milton make the change ? 16 74. Not once perceive, etc. Another deviation; see on 72. Why this change ? Whose idea gives the greater pathos, Milton's or Homer's ? Cf Odyssey ix. 91-97: "Then straightway they went and mixed with the men of the lotus-eaters, and so it was that the lotus-eaters devised not death for our fellows, but gave them of the lotus to taste. Now whosoever of them did eat the honey-sweet fruit of the lotus, had no more wish to bring tidings nor to come back, but there he chose to abide with the lotus-eating men, ever feeding on the lotus, and forgetful of his homeward way " (Butcher and Lang). Masson cites Plato's ethical application of the story in the Republic viii. and Browne com- pares F. Q. ii. 12. 86, and note, in Clarendon Press edition. 16 79. Adventurous glade. Explain. 16 80. Swift as the sparkle, etc. Note how sound and sense are blended; cf. P. L. i. 745, iv. 556, V. and A. 815. NOTES. 89 16 83. Spun out of Iris' woof. Spun out of the material dyed by Iris, the goddess of the rainbow ; an explanation supported by P. L. xi. 244. Cf. 16, 992. 16 84. Weeds. See on 16. 17 86. Who, with, etc. Note the alliteration in this and the two following lines. 17 S7. Knows to still. Cf. Lye. 10-11. 17 38. Nor of less faith. " Not less trustworthy than he is skilled in music " (Masson). 17 92. Viewless. Invisible. 17 93. The star. The evening star. Milton may have remembered Shakspere's description of the morning star; cf. M. for M. iv. 2. 218 (quoted by Keightley). 17 96. His glowing axle, etc. " Perhaps the text is an allusion to the opinion of the ancients, that the setting of the sun in the Atlantic ocean was accompanied with a noise, as of the sea hissing. See Juvenal, Sat. xiv. 280 : Audiet Herculeo stridentem gurgite solem " (Todd). 17 97. Steep. Milton here refers to what Tennyson calls " the slope of the sea," which is, of course, an optical illusion. Cf. The Prin- cess vii. 20-26. The word does not, therefore, mean " deep " (Browne) ; nor does it refer either to the steep descent of the sun (Keightley) or to the " one wide road of light, which seems to rise steep from the spec- tator to the disappearing sun " (Elton). 17 98. Slope. Sloped, i.e., sunk beneath the horizon, as the con- text shows. 17 99. Dusky pole. "The zenith, top of heaven (1. 94), which darkens as the sun withdraws, save for a last shaft of light {upward '&o*i)"(felton). 17 101. His chamber. Cf. Psalm xix. 4-5. 17 102-144. Meanwhile, etc. Bell contrasts the " spirit " of these lines with that of VAl. 25-40. 17 105. Rosy twine. Twined roses. 18 111. Of purer fire. Of the four elements, out of which it was anciently supposed everything was created, fire, the element of which it was thought the gods consisted, was deemed the purest. Cf A. and C. v. 2. 292-293, Hen. V. hi. 7. 21-25. " The stress is on fire" (Browne). 18 112. The starry quire. This is one of the numberless references in English poetry to the music of the spheres. Cf. M. of V. v. 1. 60- 65, Arcades 61-73. For the construction of the phrase, cf. 105, 1021, etc. Note the rhythm in 113-114. 90 NOTES. 18 115. Sounds and seas. Distinguish. 18 116. Morrice. A Moorish dance, said to have been brought from Spain into England in the reign of Edward III. What is the force of to ? 18 118. Pert. Lively, alert; as in M. N. D. i. i. 13. Dapper, spruce, dainty ; originally it meant " brave." Is there any real dis- tinction between fairies and elves ? 18 119. Dimpled brook. " Note the exquisite choice of epithets in dimpled and trim (1. 120) " (Trent). 18 121. Wakes. Night-watches. " The wake was kept by an all- night watch in the church. Tents were erected in the church-yard to supply refreshments to the crowd on the following day, which was kept as a holiday. Through the large attendance from neighboring parishes at wakes, devotion and reverence gradually diminished, until they ultimately became mere fairs or markets, characterized by merry- making and often disgraced by indulgence and riot " (Cent. Diet). See Brand, Popular Antiquities. 18 125. Rites. Rights in both Milton's editions, though rites in 1. 535 (Masson). 18 129. Colytto. " A goddess worshiped by the Thracians, and apparently identical with the Phrygian Cybele. Her worship was introduced at Athens and Corinth, where it was celebrated, in private, with great indecency and licentiousness." — Harper's Diet, of Class. Lit. and Ant. 18 132. Stygian darkness. See on LAI. 3. Spets ; spits. 18 135. Hecat'. Hecate, "a mysterious divinity sometimes identi- fied with Diana and sometimes with Proserpina. As Diana represents the moonlight splendor of night, so Hecate represents its darkness and terrors. She haunted cross-roads and graveyards, was the goddess of sorcery and witchcraft, and wandered by night, seen only by the dogs, whose barking told of her approach " (Gayley). 18 138-140. Ere the, etc. " These lines are a little mosaic of borrowed touches" (Verity). See Introduction, p. xlii. et seq. 18 139. Nice. Coy, prudish ; as often in Shakspere. 18 141. Descry. Reveal. 19 144. Light fantastic round. Cf.DAl.24- Round; dance. The Measure is described in the Cambridge MS. of Comus as " in a wild, rude and wanton Antic " (quoted by Verity), although it was usually a grave and solemn dance. See Much Ado ii. 1. 80. 19 145. Break off, etc. Observe how well the change in meter NOTES. 91 corresponds with the change that comes over the spirit of Comus and his talk. 19 147. Shrouds. Shelters, coverts ; the verb is used in 316. " The Cambridge MS. adds the direction They all scatter" (Verity). 19 151. Trains. Allurements ; as in Macb. iv. 3. 118. 19 153-154. Thus I hurl, etc. " Conceive that at this moment of the performance the actor who personates Comus flings into the air, or makes a gesture as if flinging into the air, some powder, which, by a stage-device, is kindled, so as to produce a flash of blue light " (Masson). The Cambridge MS. has powdered spells ; cf. 1. 165. Spongy, because the air seems to absorb the spells. 19 156. Presentments. Representations, pictures ; as in Ham. iii. 4. 54. False, because imaginary. 19 157. Quaint. " Bizarre and pretty, like the dress {habits) of a conjuror" (Elton) ; in Shakspere the word means "fine, neat, pretty, pleasant " (Schmidt). 19 161. Glozing. Flattering, deceiving. 19 163. Wind me into. Insinuate myself into the confidence of, as in Lear i. 2. 106. 19 165. Virtue. Power, efficacy; see on // P. 113. This magic dust ; see on 153-154. 19 166-169. I shall appear, etc. On the text of these lines, see Masson. 19 167. Gear. Business. 19 168. Fairly. Softly; in Much Ado v. 4. 72, "Soft and fair" together signify " gently." 20 169. The Lady. " She is the sweet embodiment of Milton's youthful ideal of virtue," says Van Dyke, "clothed with the fairness of opening womanhood, armed with the sun-clad power of chastity. Darkness and danger cannot Stir the constant mood of her calm thoughts. Evil things have no power upon her, but shrink abashed from her presence." After comparing with her Tennyson's Isabel and Godiva, he adds : " These are sisters, perfect in purity as in beauty, and worthy to be enshrined forever in the love of youth. They are ideals which draw the heart, not downward, but upward by the power of ' das ewig Weibliche.'' " — Van Dyke, Poetry of Tennyson (second edition), t pp. 69-70. 20 171. Methought. It seemed to me. In Anglo-Saxon there 92 NOTES. were two verbs, ^encan, to think, and d'yncan, to seem. From the latter came methinks, the verb being intransitive and the pronoun dative. 20 173. Jocund. Cf. L'Al. 94. 20 175. Granges. Granaries ; the original meaning of the word. 20 176. Pan. The Greek god of flocks and shepherds. See Class. Diet. 20 178. Swilled. Drunken; swilled, from swill, to drink greedily, is an epithet transferred from wassailers. " Where did the young lady ever hear or learn such expressions as ' swilled insolence ' ? " (Landor). Cf. P. L. i. 501-502. 20 179. Wassailers. Revelers ; look up etymology of word. 20 184. Spreading favour of these pines. Explain. 20 1S8. Grey-hooded Even. Is this as good an example of personi- fication as the one in R. and J. iii. 5. 9-10, or the one in Ham. i. 1. 166-167? Landor found fault with the figure. Can you guess why ? 20 1S9. Sad. Grave, serious ; as often in Elizabethan English. Votarist ; votary, one who has taken a vow. A palmer was originally " one who made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land and brought home a /a/w-branch as a token." — Skeat, Works of Chaucer, Vol. V. p. 3, which see for the essential difference between palmers and pilgrims. Can you realize the picture in 1S8-190? Do you know how a palmer was dressed ? 20 190. Wain. Wagon. 20 195. Stole. Cf. II P. 91 ; see Abbott, § 343. 20 195-200. Else, thievish Night, etc. Do you regard this figure as very poetic ? 21 204. Single. Mere, unmixed ; cf. 369. 21 205-209. A thousand fantasies, etc. " These lines are sup- posed by Warton and Todd to be based upon passages in Marco Polo's Travels, and in Heywood's Hierarchy of Angels. In a quota- tion from the latter work, benighted travellers are related to have seen three strange human shapes, that called and beckoned to them. But the Tempest may well have suggested the whole imagery " (Browne). Verity, however, urges that " Milton was drawing upon a popular superstition ; . . . No doubt many of his audience believed in these ' calling shapes ' and ' airy tongues ' of which mediaeval romance is full." On 11. 205-225, see Henry Reed, Lectures on the British Poets, i. 213-214. 21 208. Airy tongues. "... if there is one thing more striking NOTES. 93 than another in this poet, it is that his great and original imagination was almost wholly nourished by books, perhaps I should rather say set in motion by them. It is wonderful how, from the most withered and juiceless hint gathered from his reading, his grand images rise like an exhalation ; how from the most battered old lamp caught in that huge drag-net with which he swept the waters of learning, he could conjure a tall genius to build his palaces. Whatever he touches swells and towers. That wonderful passage in 'Comus' of the airy tongues, perhaps the most imaginative in suggestion he ever wrote, was conjured out of a dry sentence in Purchas's abstract of Marco Polo." — Lowell, Works (Houghton), Vol. IV. pp. 104-105. But see on 205-209. Beers, in his Hist, of Eng. Rom., etc., pp. 93-94, quotes 11. 20S-209 as a glimpse "behind the curtain which hangs between nature and the super- natural." Syllable, pronounce distinctly; literally, pronounce the sylla- bles one by one. 21 212. Conscience. A trisyllable. 21 215. Chastity. Instead of Charity (Keightley) ; cf. I Corin- thians xiii. 13. Verity notes that "the substantive chastity occurs seven times in the poem; the adjective chaste four times." Why is this significant ? 21216. I see ye visibly. 0^155-156. 21 217. Supreme. See on 4; to whom should be slurred into one syllable (t'whom). 21 219. Glistering. Glistening, a form not used by either Shaks- pere or Milton. Cf. the familiar line in M. of V. ii. 7. 65. 21 221-224. Was I deceived, etc. For other examples of iteration of the same sort, see Hill, Principles of Rhetoric (1895), P- T 5 2 I perhaps the finest example in Milton's poems is in P. L. vii. 25-26. But, if possible, consult C. A. Smith, Repetition and Parallelism in English Verse. What proverb do these lines suggest ? 21 225. Casts. This is an example of construction changed by change of thought; we should expect cast. But see Abbott, §415, Masson, Vol. III. p. 84. Tufted; cf. VAl. 78. 22 230. Sweet Echo. For the story of Echo and Narcissus (237), see Class. Diet. The appeal to Echo seems to have been a common device with masque-writers, and several instances very similar to the present one can be pointed out in masques which preceded Milton's. Examine the metrical structure of the song. 22 231. Thy airy shell. The hollow vault of the atmosphere, or Omar Khayyam's 94 NOTES. " inverted Bowl they call the Sky, Whereunder crawling coop'd we live and die." Cf. Nat. 102-103. But the word has been taken as referring to (1) a sea-shell, (2) a musical shell {concha), or (3) the body or form of Echo. Thomas, who defends the last interpretation, says : " Milton frequently uses ' airy ' in the sense of 'unsubstantial' or 'spirit.' (See above, 1. 208; also // P. 148); and if we remember the mythological story, how Echo pined away, and her material body disappeared, leaving nothing but her voice, ' airy shell ' might well be applied to her form." Of which of these, prithee, was Landor thinking, when he said : " The habitation is better adapted to an oyster than to Echo " ? 22 232. Meander. A river in Asia Minor from which we have derived a much-used word. See Hales, Folia Litteraria, pp. 231-238. Professor Hales thinks the Meander is mentioned because it " was a famous haunt of swans, and the swan was a favourite bird with the Greek and Latin writers — one to whose sweet singing they perpetually allude. . . . there is no particular reference to the sinuous course of the river, except so far as the epithet 'slow ' refers to it." The special haunt of the nightingale which Milton had in mind, according to Hales, was " the woodlands close by Athens to the north-west, through which the Cephissus flowed, and where stood the birthplace of Sophocles, Singer of sweet Colonus and its child." Margent, margin. 22 234. Love-lorn. Deprived of her love; cf. Temp. iv. 1. 68. 22 241. Parley. Speech. Do you note the appropriateness of this designation ? Daughter of the Sphere, i.e., daughter of what Milton calls the airy shell, if that phrase be taken in the sense first suggested in the note on 231 ; see Cent. Diet. s. v. sphere. Warburton (quoted by Todd), however, thinks that Milton supposes Echo to "owe her first existence to the reverberation of the music of the spheres." If this be true, sphere is used in the sense common to the old astronomers, who imagined that the stars, sun, moon, and planets were set in transparent spheres, which revolved about the earth as their center and produced the " music of the spheres." Cf. At a Solemn Music 2. 22 243. Resounding grace. Grace of resounding, i.e., charm of echo. What is the effect of the Alexandrine ? 22 244. In the Cambridge MS., Verity says, there is a stage-direc- tion : Comus looks in and speaks. " This beginning has the ring of Marlowe's verse, its impetus and passion " (Elton). NOTES. 95 22 247. Vocal air. Explain. 22 248. His. Its. 22 250. Empty-vaulted night. Explain. 22 251. Fall. Cf. T. JVA. I. 4. Smoothing, etc.; cf. II P. 58. 22 252. It. What ? Note the exquisite beauty of 11. 249-252. 22 253. Sirens. Milton, in associating the sirens with Circe, modi- fies the myth to suit his own purpose, just as Browne in his Inner Temple Masque had previously done. Homer, moreover, mentions only two Sirens. See Class. Diet. ; Odyssey x. xii. Also see on 867- 889. 22 254. Flowery-kirtled. Wearing kirtles covered with flowers, or, perhaps, kirtles made of flowers. 22 256. Take the prisoned soul. " Take the soul prisoner ; 'prisoned' being used proleptically " (Bell). For examples of pro- lepsis in Shakspere, see Schmidt, p. 1420. 22 257. Lap. Cf. DAI. 136. Scylla ; see Class. Diet. 23 258. Barking waves. Cf. Virgil, sEneid vii. 588 : midtis circum latrantibus undis. 23 259. Charybdis. See Class. Diet. 23 260. Yet they, etc. Browne quotes F. Q. iii. Introduction 4 : " My senses lulled are in slomber of delight." 23 265. Hail, foreign wonder ! Cf. Temp.i. 2. 421-427. Dr. John- son thought the dispute between the Lady and Comus "the most ani- mated and affecting scene of the drama." 23 267. Unless. To bring out the meaning, supply thou be after Unless, although the charm of the line lies in the suppressed inference. 23 268. Pan. See on 176. Sylvan ; see on II P. 134. 23 269-270. Forbidding, etc. Cf. Arcades 44-53. 23 271. Ill is lost. A Latin idiom, — male perditur (Keightley). 23 273. Extreme shift. Last resort ; cf. 617. For accent, see on 4. 23-24 277-290. What chance, etc. " Here is an imitation of those scenes in the Greek tragedies where the dialogue proceeds by question and answer, a single verse being allotted to each" (Hurd, quoted by Masson). Cf. Rich. III. iv. 4. 211-218, 343-361, M. of V. iv. 1. 65-69, Browning, Balaustion, etc. 23 279. Near-ushering guides. Explain. 23 285. Forestalling. Anticipating. 24 286. Hit. Guess; see on 77 P. 14. 24 290. Hebe. See on DAI. 29. Unrazored ; Warton thought this an " unpleasant epithet," but he noted that Shakspere has razorable, 96 NOTES. Temp. ii. i. 250. Does Milton make the brothers talk in character with his description of them ? 24 291. What time. When. Laboured ox; why the epithet? The notation of time here is quite pastoral. " The return of oxen and horses from the plough is certainly not a natural circumstance of an English evening, except it be an evening in winter, when the ploughman must work as long as he can see " (Todd). Landor also says that " in the summer, and this was summer, neither the ox nor the hedger are at work." 24 293. Swinked. Labored, tired ; look up etymology. Hedger, a maker or mender of hedges ; possibly the word is here used generally for " laborer." 24 294. Mantling. Covering like a mantle ; not " spreading," as some editors interpret. LI. 294-296 are among the best in the poem. 24 297. Port. Bearing. As they stood ; pleonasm. 24 299. Element. The air or sky ; so in Shakspere frequently. 24 301. Plighted. Folded. For awe-strook, see Masson on P. L. ii. 165. 24 303. Like the path to Heaven. Point out the similarity. 24 312. Dingle . . . dell. Distinguish. 24 313. Bosky. Woody. Bourne, brook or boundary, it is difficult to say which. See New Eng. Diet. 24 315. Stray attendance. Strayed attendants; for examples in Shakspere of the abstract for the concrete, see. Schmidt, pp. 1421-1423. 25 316. Shroud. See on 147. 25 317. Low-roosted lark. " The lark in her low resting-place " (Masson) ; roost, even to-day, is used figuratively for " any temporary resting-place" (Stand. Diet). Cf. P. R. ii. 279-280. 25 318. Thatched pallet. Thatched, as Masson suggests, may here refer to the texture of the nest itself, and not to the covering. Keight- ley, however, says : " The ideas here belong rather to a hen-house than to the resting-place of the lark, which has no thatch over it, and in which, as it is on the ground, he does not roost." 25 322. Courtesy. Milton suggests the correct derivation of the word ; cf. F. Q. vi. I . I : " Of Court, it seemes, men Courtesie doe call, For that it there most useth to abound ; And well beseemeth that in princes hall That vertue should be plentifully found, Which of all goodly manners is the ground, And roote of civill conversation : " NOTES. 97 25 324. Tapestry. Pronounce. 25 329. Square. Adjust; cf. IV. T. v. i. 52. 25 330. The Two Brothers. " The dialogue between the two brothers is an amicable contest between fact and philosophy. The younger draws his arguments from common apprehension, and the obvious appearance of things : the elder proceeds on a profounder knowledge, and argues from abstracted principles. Here the difference of their ages is properly made subservient to a contrast of character " (Warton, quoted by Todd). Considered from a dramatic point of view, could the dialogue be improved in any way ? 25 332. The traveller's benison. Cf. F. Q. iii. 1. 43. 25 333. Stoop. Cf. II P. 72. 25 334. Disinherit. Dispossess ; see Schmidt for Shakspere's use of " inherit." 25 335. Double night, etc. "The natural darkness of night and the local darkness of the woods " (Masson). Cf. S. A. 593. 25 338. Wicker hole. What is meant ? 25 340. Rule. Line, ray; in the prose and poetry of our language there are many descriptions of the same thing, some of w T hich will readily recur to the mind. What effect is the alliteration in this line intended to produce ? 25 341. Star of Arcady, etc. Any star in the constellation of the Greater Bear. Tyricrn (Cynosure, the Lesser Bear, the constellation by which the Tyrian or Phoenician mariners steered. See on UAL 80 ; look up the myths of Callisto and Areas in Class. Diet., which will explain the phrase of Aready. 26 345. Pastoral reed. Shepherd's pipe. Oaten stops, holes in the oaten stem of which the shepherd's pipe is made. See on Lye. 33. 26 349. Innumerous. Innumerable; cf. P. L. vii. 455. 26 356. What if, etc. Supply the ellipsis in this line. 26 358. Savage hunger, etc. " The hunger of savage beasts, or the lust of men as savage as they" (Newton). 26 359. Over-exquisite. Too inquisitive; look up etymology of exquisite. 26 360. Cast the fashion. Foretell the form. If this interpreta- tion is correct, the metaphor is from astrology, and not from medi- cine, metallurgy, or accounts, as has been variously explained. 26 361. Be so. That is, be really evils. Is this line necessary ? 26 362. What. Why. 98 NOTES. 26 363. Run to meet, etc. What proverb is alluded to ? Cf. Much Ado i. i. 96-97. 26 366. So to seek. So at a loss ; cf. P. L. viii. 197. 26 367. Unprincipled. Ungrounded in the principles of. 26 370. Not being in danger, etc. " Lord Monboddo greatly ad- mired this parenthesis, and pointed out how the voice of the speaker must have varied its tone in passing from the first clause to the second" (Masson). 27 373-375. Virtue could see, etc. Cf. R. and J. hi. 2. 8-9; also F. Q.i. 1. 12: " Vertue gives her selfe light through darkenesse for to wade." Ben Jonson, in Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue, says of Virtue : " She, she it is in darkness shines, 'T is she that still herself refines, By her own light to every eye." 27 375. Flat sea. Cf. Lye. 98. 27 375-380. And wisdom's self, etc. It has been pointed out that these lines describe Milton's life at Horton, 1632-1637. 27 376. Seeks to. Resorts to ; " common in our translation of the Bible" (Todd). 27 377. Contemplation. Cf. II P. 54. 27 380. All to-ruffled. In Milton's editions printed all to ruffl'd, which has been variously emended : (1) all too ruffled ; (2) all-to ruffled ; (3) all to-ruffled. Of these the last has the most to support it, and means " quite ruffled up "; the other readings may be interpreted as (1) " much too ruffled," and (2) " altogether ruffled." See Masson's note and New Eng. Diet. s.v. All, C. 14, 15. 27 382. I' the centre. That is, in the center of the earth ; cf. P. L. i. 74, 686, P. R. iv. 534. 27 385. Himself is his own dungeon. Cf. S. A. 155-156, P. L. i. 254-255. 27 385-389. >T is most true, etc. Cf. II P. 167-174. 27 386. Affects. Likes, prefers ; with no sense of doing so for effect. 27 389. As safe, etc. " Milton was thinking of the Roman Curia. Twenty years later Cromwell showed, April 20th, 1653, tnat tne S reat English Council-chamber was not inviolable " (Verity). 27 390. Weeds. See on VAl. 12c. 27 393. Hesperian. The Hesperides were the sisters, who, assisted NOTES. 99 by the dragon Ladon, guarded the golden apples of Juno. To slay this dragon and secure the fruit was one of the labors of Hercules. See Class. Diet. 27 395. Unenchanted. Explain ; see on VAl. 40. 27 398. Unsunned. Cf. KQ.il 7. Heading: " Gunyon findes Mamon in a delve, Sunning his treasure hore." 27 401. Wink on. Shut the eyes to, seem not to see ; or possibly, give a significant look to. Cf. A. Y. L. I 3. 112. 27 402. A single. Trent inserts a comma after single. Any differ- ence in meaning? 28 403. Surrounding. What was the original meaning of the word ? 28 404. Of night or loneliness. Cf. 369. It recks me not, I take no account; cf. Lye. 122. 28 408. Infer. Argue. 28 409. Without all doubt. Beyond all doubt. 28 413. Suspicion. Pronounce. 28 419. If. Even if. 28-30 420-475. 'T is chastity, etc. This passage, says Masson, "is not only a concentrated expression of the moral of the whole Masque, but also an exposition of what was a cardinal idea with Milton through his whole life, and perhaps the most central idea of his personal philos- ophy in early manhood." 28 421. Complete steel. See on 4; cf. Ham. I 4. 52. 28 422. A quivered nymph, etc. Cf. Spenser's description of Bel- phcebe, K Q. ii. 3. 29, 31. 28 423. Trace. Traverse. Cf. M. AT. £>. ii. 1. 25. Unharboured, unharboring ; sometimes interpreted " yielding no shelter." 28 424. Infamous. Pronounce. 28 425. The sacred rays, etc. Cf. 7S2. 28 426. Bandite. So spelled by Milton. Mountaineer, as Warton notes, is here an opprobrious term; cf. Cymb. iv. 2. 120. Contrast the present use of the word. 28 428. Very. Veritable ; very is here an adjective. 28 429. Horrid. Meaning? Cf. horror, 38, and Latin horridus. How is the word sometimes abused ? 29 432. Some say, etc. Cf. Ham. I 1. 158-164; Newton cites Fletcher, Kaithful Shepherdess, i. I : 100 NOTES. " Yet I have heard (my mother told it me, And now I do believe it), if I keep My virgin-flower uncropt, pure, chaste, and fair, No goblin, wood-god, fairy, elf, or fiend, Satyr, or other power that haunts the groves, Shall hurt my body, or by vain illusion Draw me to wander after idle fires ; Or voices calling me in dead, of night, To make me follow, and so tole me on, Through mire and standing pools, to find my ruin." What differences do you find between 11. 432-437, 438-452, and 453- 475- 28 433. Or fire. See on UAL 104 ; cf. P. L. ix. 634-642. 29 434. Blue. " There were witches to represent most colours " (Verity), but blue here may refer to the appearance of the hag. Unlaid ghost, a ghost that has not been "laid" or exorcised ; cf. Cymb. iv. 2. 278. For some interesting superstitions entertained regarding ghosts, see Brand, Popular Antiquities. 29 435. Curfew. See on II P. 74 ; for the popular superstition that ghosts would wander about from curfew until the first cockcrow, cf. Lear iii. 4. 1 20-1 21. 29 436. Goblin. See on UAL 105. Swart ; cf. Lye. 138. Warton and Todd give numerous instances of the superstition which supposed that mines were inhabited by various sorts of spirits. 29 438-440. Do ye believe, etc. Cf. the latter part of the justly famous passage on " Athens, the eye of Greece," P. R. iv. 236-284. 29 442. Silver-shafted queen. " The epithet is applicable to Diana both as huntress and goddess of the moon : as the former she bore arrows which were frequently called shafts, and as the latter she bore shafts or rays of light " (Bell). 29 443. Brinded. Cf. Macb. iv. 1. 1. 29 445. The frivolous bolt of Cupid. Verity objects that " Cupid was said to have two kinds of darts, one with a golden, the other with a leaden tip ; the former to cause, the latter to repel, love," and quotes Ovid, Met. i. 469-471 ; but Milton, who was certainly aware of this fact, evidently depends upon the context, and the epithet frivolous (especially characteristic of the golden bolt), to make clear his meaning. 29 447. Snaky-headed Gorgon shield. Cf Iliad v. 738-741 : " About her shoulders cast she the tasselled aegis terrible . . . and therein is the dreadful monster's Gorgon head, dreadful and grim, NO TES. 101 portent of aegis-bearing Zeus." For snaky-headed, look up the myth of Perseus and Medusa in Class. Diet. 29 449. Freezed. On the tendency of strong verbs to become weak consult some good history of the English language, — Emerson's or Lounsbury's. Congealed ; see on 4. 29 450. Rigid looks, etc. " Rigid looks refer to snaky locks, and noble grace to the beautiful face, as Gorgon is represented on ancient gems" (Warburton, quoted by Todd). 29 451. Dashed. Put out of countenance ; cf. L. L. L. v. 2. 585. 29 452. Blank awe. Explain. 29 455. Lackey. Attend as lackies, or servants. 29 457. Vision. A trisyllable; cf. 298. 29 458. Things that no gross ear can hear. Cf. 784, Arcades 73. See on 112. 29-30 459-463. Till oft converse, etc. Cf. P. L. v. 404-503, where the doctrine is developed more at length. Oft converse, frequent inter- course. Heavenly habitants ; cf. 455. 29 462. Turns. We should expect the subjunctive here, as in 460, but perhaps Masson is right in suggesting that the syntax is intention- ally abnormal ; " as if certainty had so increased before the second clause that it could be stated as a fact." 30 463-475. But, when lust, etc. Warton was the first to perceive that the doctrine here expounded is from Plato's Pha:do. See Jowett, Dialogues of Plato (third edition), Vol. II. pp. 224-225. 30 469. Divine. Pronounce. 30 473. It. What should we have expected ? 30 474. Sensualty. So spelled by Milton. 30 478. But musical, etc. Shakspere had previously said this of Love ; cf. L. L. L. iv. 3. 342-343. The present passage is usually taken as a compliment to Plato. 30 483. Night-foundered. Explain ; cf P. LA. 204. 30 4S6. Sister. Lowell notes that " the e is elided from the word sister by its preceding a vowel." — Works (Houghton), Vol. IV. p. 108, note. 31 490. That hallo, etc. The edition printed by Lawes in 1637 has the following stage-direction : " He hallos ; the Guardian Daemon hallos again, and enters in the habit of a shepherd." W T hat is the effect of the succession of hallos {cf 481, 486, 487, 490) ? 31 491. Iron stakes. Cf 487. 31 492. Young. Stress. 102 NOTES. 31 494. Thyrsis. See on L'Al. 83-88 ; in Epitaphium Damonis, Milton represents himself as Thyrsis, and in his poem entitled Thyrsis Matthew Arnold sings of his friend Clough. The name has been freely used in pastoral poetry from the time of Theocritus to the present. 31 495-512. The huddling brook, etc. Note the rhymed couplets in this passage. Why are they used ? 31 495. Huddling. Explain. To what legend is there an allusion in this passage? Cf UAL 145-150, etc. 31 501. His next joy. Rolfe takes this as referring to the younger brother, but if next be used in the sense of " nearest," " dearest," a sense frequent enough in Elizabethan English, it may be addressed to the elder brother. 31 502. Toy. See on // P. 4. 31 506. To. Force oito? 31 507. Where is she ? But see 562 et seq. 31 508. How chance, etc. See Abbott, § 37. 31 509. Sadly. See on 189. 31 512. Shew. Pronounce. 31 515. Sage poets. Milton refers especially to Homer and Virgil, though there is a possibility of his having Spenser and Tasso also in mind. In P. L. hi. 19, he repeats taught by the heavenly Muse. 32 516. Storied. Explain ; cf. IIP. 1 59. 32 517. Dire Chimeras. Cf. P. L. ii. 628. Enchanted isles ; refer- ring, probably, to the islands of Circe and Calypso (Odyssey), although Verity thinks the " Wandering Islands " of the E. Q. ii. 12. 11 et seq. are meant. Spenser, he adds, there follows Tasso's account of the isle of Armida. 32 520. Navel. Center. The editors note that Delphi was named the navel of the earth. 32 521. A sorcerer, etc. See 46 et seq., and on 58. 32 526. Murmurs. Incantations; cf 817, Arcades 60, and Statius, Thebais ix. 732-733 (quoted by Todd) : Cantusque sacros et conscia miscet Murnnira. 32 529. Reason. Cf. P. L. v. 100-102. 32 530. Charactered. Impressed, stamped. The word is accented on the second syllable; being used in its original sense (Gr. x a P aKT VP)> it continues the metaphor, which is taken from the process of melting down coins. NOTES. 103 32 531. Crofts. "A piece of enclosed ground, used for tillage or pasture : in most localities a small piece of arable land adjacent to a house" {New Eng. Diet). Milton's use of the word here, as Murray remarks, suggests the sense of the Dutch word kroft, krocht, which he defines as " prominent rocky height, high and dry land, field on the downs." 32 532. Brow. Overhang; cf.L'Al.S. Whence; explain. 32 533. Monstrous rout. See on Lye. 1 58. 32 534. Stabled wolves. Wolves in their dens, although some edi- tors interpret " wolves that have got into the sheepfold." But compare P. L. xi. 751-752, and Virgil, sEneid vi. 179: stabula alta ferarum (quoted by Bell). 32 535. Hecate. See on 135. 32 539. Unweeting. Unwitting. 32 540. By then. By the time that ; or perhaps by then . . .fold is parenthetical. 32 542. Dew-besprent. Sprinkled with dew; cf. Lye. 29. 32 545. Flaunting honeysuckle. Cf. Lye. 40. 32 546. Melancholy. Pensive contemplation ; a sense now rare. "This line contains the gist of // Penseroso" (Trent). 33 547. To meditate. Probably " to practise " ; see on Lye. 66. 33 54S. Close. " The conclusion of a musical phrase, theme, or movement ; a Cadence " {New Eng. Diet.). Which idea best suits the present passage ? Cf. Nat. 99-100. 33 550. Barbarous. Etymological meaning ? 33 552. An unusual stop. See 145. 33 553. Drowsy-flighted. "Always drowsily-flying" (Masson). The reading in the text is from the Cambridge MS., which gives drowsy flighted ; both of Milton's editions, as well as Lawes's edition of 1637, have drowsie frighted. If Milton intended the latter, the mean- ing would probably be " the drowsy steeds that have been frightened " (Masson). Some editors print drowsy-frighted, and explain frighted as "freighted." 33 554. Close-curtained Sleep. Cf. Shakspere's " The curtain'd Sleep," Macb. ii. 1. 51 ; see also my edition of The Ancient Mariner (The Macmillan Company), p. 88. 33 555-562. At last, etc. The reference is to the Echo song (230); the lines themselves constitute Milton's finest compliment to Lady Alice. 33 556. Rose like a steam, etc. Cf. T. N. i. 1. 1-7; the second edition has stream, and so spoils the comparison. 104 NOTES. 33 557. That. So that; cf. P. L. iv. 604. 33 560. Still. Always, ever. 33 561. Create a soul, etc. See Masson's note for Warburton's absurd suggestion as to the origin of this passage, and Trent's note for another of the same sort. By all means look up the famous description of Death in P. L. ii. 666-673. 33 568. Lawns. See on DAL 71. 33 572. By certain signs. Cf 644. 33 573. Prevent. Anticipate; as often in Shakspere. 34 585. Period. Sentence. For me, as far as I am concerned. 34 586-599. Against the threats, etc. " A peculiarly Miltonic pas- sage : one of those that ought to be got by heart both on their own account and in memory of Milton " (Masson). 34 591. Meant most harm. Meant to be most harmful. 34 592. Happy trial. Explain. 34 598-599. The pillared firmament, etc. What, then, is his con- ception of the universe ? Cf. P. R. iv. 455. 34 603. Legions. A trisyllable. 34 604. Acheron. A river in Hell, but here put for the whole region; cf. P. L. ii. 575 et seq. Todd quotes: "All hell run out, and sooty flags display," P. Fletcher, Locusts (1627). 34 605. Harpies and Hydras. See Class. Diet. 34 606. 'Twixt Africa and Ind. What have you read about this region which would make Milton's reference appropriate ? 35 607. Purchase. " Acquisition of any kind and by any means " (Schmidt). In Cymb. i. 4. 91, the word is used, as here, in the sense of " ill-gotten gains." Is there any word in the line which includes the sense of back ? Why, then, was the word added ? Can you find any other instances of the sort ? 35 608. The curls. Note the indirect description. What character- istic in Comus does this detail bring out ? 35 610. Emprise. Enterprise. 35 611. Stead. Help, service. 35 617. Utmost shifts. See on 273. 35 619-628. A certain shepherd lad, etc. There is probably a refer- ence here to Charles Diodati, Milton's bosom friend, whose death in 1638 inspired the Epitaphiitm Da??ionis. On Diodati's botanical knowledge, see E. D. 1 50-1 54. 35 620. To see to. To look at ; cf. Ezekiel xxiii. 15. 35 621. Virtuous. See on // P. 113. NOTES. 105 35 626. Scrip. Wallet, small bag. 35 627. Simples. Medicinal herbs; cf. K. and J. v. i. 40. 35 630. But. Effect of using this word here, and in 632, 633 ? 35 633. Bore. Subject? 35 634. Like. Correspondingly. 36 635. Clouted shoon. Shoes "having the sole protected with iron plates, or studded with large-headed nails " {New Eng. Diet) ; but the meaning may also be " shoes mended with clouts or patches." Cf. 2 Hen. VI iv. 2. 195. 36 636. Moly. Cf. Odyssey x. 28 1 et sea., but especially 302-306: " Therewith the slayer of Argos gave me the plant that he had plucked from the ground, and he showed me the growth thereof. It was black at the root, but the flower was like to milk. Moly the gods call it, but it is hard for mortal men to dig ; howbeit with the gods all things are possible " (Butcher and Lang). Ulysses used the plant as an antidote against Circe's spells. How do you scan this line ? 36 638. Haemony. There may be here a reference to Hcemonia, an old name for Thessaly, the land of magic. For Coleridge's explanation of the name, as well as for his very curious allegorical interpretation of 11. 629-641, see Letters of S. T. Coleridge (Houghton), Vol. I. pp. 406-407. *. 36 639. Sovran. " Supremely medicinal and efficacious " (Schmidt) ; as often in Shakspere. 36 640. Mildew blast. Cf. Ham. iii. 4. 64. 36 641. Furies. See Class. Diet.; Verity, however, interprets " evil fairies." Apparition ; five syllables. " 36 642. Little reckoning made. Cf. Lye. 116. 36 646. Lime-twigs. Snares ; literally twigs smeared with bird- lime for catching birds. Shakspere uses the word in 2 Hen. VI. iii. 3.16. 36 649. Necromancer. Etymological meaning? 36 650-652. With dauntless hardihood, etc. So Ulysses sprang upon Circe with a drawn sword {Odyssey x. 321-322), and so Gunyon broke the glass of Acrasia (F. Q. ii. 12. 57). 36 653. But seize his wand. Cf. Temp. Hi. 2. 95-103. 36 655. Vomit smoke. Cf. Virgil, sEneid \'i\i, 252-253 : Faucibus ingentem fumum, mirabile dictu, Evomit ; which is said of the giant Cacus, one of the sons of Vulcan. 106 NOTES. 36-37 659-665. Nay, Lady, etc. See Garnett, Milton, p. 54, for a similar train of thought in Calderon's Magico Prodigioso, which was acted in 1637 but unknown to Milton. A writer in the New Monthly Magazine, Vol. VII. p. 227, objects that in the dialogue between Comus and the Lady (659-813), " Comus . . . has the poetry, and the lady the metaphysics." Do you see any objection to this ? Was there any way to avoid this ? 37 661. Daphne. Daphne, pursued by Apollo, was, at her own request, changed into a laurel tree. See Class. Diet. ; note the inver- sion in this passage. 37 664. This corporal rind. " This fleshly nook," // P. 92. 37 665. While. So long as. 37 672-675. And first, etc. For arrangement of lines in Cambridge MS., see Verity. 37 672. Julep. Look up etymological meaning of julep and syrup (674). 37 673. His. Its. 37 675-678. Not that Nepenthes, etc. Cf. Odyssey iv. 220 et sea. s " Presently she [Helen] cast a drug into the wine whereof they drank, a drug to lull all pain and anger, and bring forgetfulness of every sorrow. Whoso should drink a draught thereof, when it is mingled in the bowl, on that day he would let no tear fall down his cheeks, not though his mother and his father died, not though men slew his brother or dear son with the sword before his face, and his own eyes beheld it. Medicines of such virtue and so helpful had the daughter of Zeus, which Polydamna, the wife of Thon, had given her, a woman of Egypt" (Butcher and Lang). In his note to Odyssey iv. 220, Merry says it is impossible to say what this drug (