Book Read Free

The Annotated Milton: Complete English Poems

Page 76

by John Milton; Burton Raffel

CYRANO DE BERGERAC, Edmond Rostand, 978-0-553-21360-7

  IVANHOE, Sir Walter Scott, 978-0-553-21326-3

  THE COMPLETE WORKS OF SHAKESPEARE (29 vols.), William Shakespeare

  PYGMALION and MAJOR BARBARA, George Bernard Shaw, 978-0-553-21408-6

  FRANKENSTEIN, Mary Shelley, 978-0-553-21247-1

  THE JUNGLE, Upton Sinclair, 978-0-553-21245-7

  THE WEALTH OF NATIONS, Adam Smith, 978-0-553-58597-1

  ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, 978-0-553-24777-0

  THE COMPLETE PLAYS OF SOPHOCLES, Sophocles, 978-0-553-21354-6

  DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE, Robert Louis Stevenson, 978-0-553-21277-8

  KIDNAPPED, Robert Louis Stevenson, 978-0-553-21260-0

  TREASURE ISLAND, Robert Louis Stevenson, 978-0-553-21249-5

  DRACULA, Bram Stoker, 978-0-553-21271-6

  UNCLE TOM’S CABIN, Harriet Beecher Stowe, 978-0-553-21218-1

  GULLIVER’S TRAVELS AND OTHER WRITINGS, Jonathan Swift, 978-0-553-21232-7

  VANITY FAIR, William Makepeace Thackeray, 978-0-553-21462-8

  WALDEN AND OTHER WRITINGS, Henry David Thoreau, 978-0-553-21246-4

  DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA, Alexis de Tocqueville, 978-0-553-21464-2

  ANNA KARENINA, Leo Tolstoy, 978-0-553-21346-1

  THE DEATH OF IVAN ILYICH, Leo Tolstoy, 978-0-553-21035-4

  THE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN, Mark Twain, 978-0-553-21079-8

  THE ADVENTURES OF TOM SAWYER, Mark Twain, 978-0-553-21128-3

  THE COMPLETE SHORT STORIES OF MARK TWAIN, Mark Twain, 978-0-553-21195-5

  A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR’S COURT, Mark Twain, 978-0-553-21143-6

  LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI, Mark Twain, 978-0-553-21349-2

  THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER, Mark Twain, 978-0-553-21256-3

  PUDD’NHEAD WILSON, Mark Twain, 978-0-553-21158-0

  20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA, Jules Verne, 978-0-553-21252-5

  AROUND THE WORLD IN EIGHTY DAYS, Jules Verne, 978-0-553-21356-0

  FROM THE EARTH TO THE MOON, Jules Verne, 978-0-553-21420-8

  THE AENEID OF VIRGIL, Virgil, 978-0-553-21041-5

  CANDIDE, Voltaire, 978-0-553-21166-5

  THE INVISIBLE MAN, H. G. Wells, 978-0-553-21353-9

  THE ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU, H. G. Wells, 978-0-553-21432-1

  THE TIME MACHINE, H. G. Wells, 978-0-553-21351-5

  THE WAR OF THE WORLDS, H. G. Wells, 978-0-553-21338-6

  THE AGE OF INNOCENCE, Edith Wharton, 978-0-553-21450-5

  THE CUSTOM OF THE COUNTRY, Edith Wharton, 978-0-553-21393-5

  ETHAN FROME AND OTHER SHORT FICTION, Edith Wharton, 978-0-553-21255-6

  THE HOUSE OF MIRTH, Edith Wharton, 978-0-553-21320-1

  SUMMER, Edith Wharton, 978-0-553-21422-2

  LEAVES OF GRASS, Walt Whitman, 978-0-553-21116-0

  THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY AND OTHER WRITINGS, Oscar Wilde, 978-0-553-21254-9

  THE SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON, Johann David Wyss, 978-0-553-21403-1

  EARLY AFRICAN-AMERICAN CLASSICS, edited by Anthony Appiah, 978-0-553-21379-9

  FIFTY GREAT SHORT STORIES, edited by Milton Crane, 978-0-553-27745-6

  FIFTY GREAT AMERICAN SHORT STORIES, edited by Milton Crane, 978-0-553-27294-9

  SHORT SHORTS, edited by Irving Howe, 978-0-553-27440-0

  GREAT AMERICAN SHORT STORIES, edited by Wallace & Mary Stegner, 978-0-440-33060-8

  AMERICAN SHORT STORY MASTERPIECES, edited by Raymond Carver & Tom Jenks, 978-0-440-20423-7

  SHORT STORY MASTERPIECES, edited by Robert Penn Warren, 978-0-440-37864-8

  THE VOICE THAT IS GREAT WITHIN US, edited by Hayden Carruth, 978-0-553-26263-6

  THE BLACK POETS, edited by Dudley Randal, 978-0-553-27563-6

  THREE CENTURIES OF AMERICAN POETRY, edited by Allen Mandelbaum, (Trade) 978-0-553-37518-3, (Hardcover) 978-0-553-10250-5

  JOHN MILTON was born on December 9, 1608. A brilliant scholar, he received his B.A. and M.A. from Christ’s College, Cambridge, and began writing poetry. Instead of entering the ministry, he retired to his father’s country house and for the next five years read day and night, devouring most of the existing written works in English, Greek, Latin, and Italian. During this period he wrote the masque Comus (1634) and “Lycidas” (1637), an elegy memorializing a college classmate. In 1638 he went on a tour of Europe, spending most of his time in Italy. He returned home prematurely because of the religious unrest in England and began writing tracts that branded him a radical. In 1642 he married Mary Powell, a seventeen-year-old girl. Within six weeks, she returned to her parents’ home, and Milton wrote a series of angry pamphlets advocating divorce on the grounds of incompatibility. Eventually, she returned and bore him four children, three of whom survived. By 1651 Milton’s poor eyesight failed completely, leaving him blind. After his wife’s death, he remarried, only to have his second wife die some months after childbirth. His third marriage, to Elizabeth Minshull, was a longer and happier one. At the Restoration, Milton narrowly escaped execution because of his politics, but was left impoverished. Now he returned to writing poetry and created the masterpieces for which he will be forever remembered, beginning with Paradise Lost (1667). He followed this epic with Paradise Regained and Samson Agonistes (jointly published in 1671). Milton died in 1674. Along with Chaucer and Shakespeare, Milton is one of the true giants of our language.

  THE ANNOTATED MILTON

  A Bantam Book

  PUBLISHING HISTORY

  Bantam Classic edition published September 1999

  Bantam Classic reissue / December 2008

  Published by

  Bantam Dell

  A Division of Random House, Inc.

  New York, New York

  All rights reserved

  Translation copyright © 1999 by Burton Raffel

  * * *

  Bantam Books and the rooster colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

  * * *

  eISBN: 978-0-553-90582-3

  www.bantamdell.com

  v1.0

  FOOTNOTES

  1 celestial

  Return to text.

  2 hardness

  Return to text.

  3 Italian: Galileo

  Return to text.

  4 practical scientist, learned man

  Return to text.

  5 discover, make known

  Return to text.

  6 spotted, patchy

  Return to text.

  7 admiral’s ship, flagship

  Return to text.

  8 straight slender stick

  Return to text.

  9 difficult, troublesome

  Return to text.

  10 soil

  Return to text.

  1111 beat/shone strongly

  Return to text.

  12 covered, roofed

  Return to text.

  13 talked idly, lied about

  Return to text.

  14 steeply, perpendicularly

  Return to text.

  15 fortifications placed on top of walls

  Return to text.

  16 directly overhead

  Return to text.

  17 unpolished, rough

  Return to text.

  18 streams

  Return to text.

  19 reeds, pipes, flutes

  Return to text.

  20 pastoral

  Return to text.

  21 extended across

  Return to text.

  22 pulled around him

  Return to text.

  23 Terah = Abraham’s father

  Return to text.

  24 Egyptian

  Return to text.

  25 i.e., the sea saw the strength of the Almighty’s hand

  Return to text.

  26 cowardly

  Return to text.

  27 army

  Return to text.

  28 defeat

  Return to text.

  29 always, forever

  Ret
urn to text.

  30 who

  Return to text.

  31 streams, brooks

  Return to text.

  32 proclaim

  Return to text.

  33 widely, at large

  Return to text.

  34 destroy, kill, overcome

  Return to text.

  35 brightly colored

  Return to text.

  36 greatness, power, dignity

  Return to text.

  37 cruel, terrible, savage [adjective]

  Return to text.

  38 the Hebrew people

  Return to text.

  39 the Red Sea

  Return to text.

  40 brown-skinned

  Return to text.

  41 desolate

  Return to text.

  42 the Amorites, pre-Israelite dwellers in Canaan

  Return to text.

  43 Amorite king, and an exceedingly large man

  Return to text.

  44 excessively bold, daring

  Return to text.

  45 Jacob

  Return to text.

  46 to sing, celebrate in song

  Return to text.

  47 blossomed

  Return to text.

  48 withered

  Return to text.

  49 color vermilion

  Return to text.

  50 the north wind (Aquilo = “eagle”)

  Return to text.

  51 winter’s

  Return to text.

  52 rough, coarse, violent

  Return to text.

  53 Orythia, daughter of the king of Athens

  Return to text.

  54 affected injuriously

  Return to text.

  55 i.e., unless he too wedded some fair one

  Return to text.

  56 notorious

  Return to text.

  57 maturity, old age

  Return to text.

  58 frisky, sportive

  Return to text.

  59 carriage, chariot

  Return to text.

  60 dwelling

  Return to text.

  61 shamed, disgraced

  Return to text.

  62 unknowing, unwitting

  Return to text.

  63 once

  Return to text.

  64 Zephyr, the west wind, also loved Hyacinth, and in revenge caused a quoit (iron ring thrown at a peg in the ground) thrown by Apollo to swerve, hit, and kill Hyacinth

  Return to text.

  65 Eurotas = Laconian river; strand = bank, shore

  Return to text.

  66 shallowly dug? or an in-ground grave rather than a properly elevated tomb structure?

  Return to text.

  67 explain, clarify

  Return to text.

  68 verses, poem

  Return to text.

  69 creature, being

  Return to text.

  70 benefit, behalf

  Return to text.

  71 appropriate, proper

  Return to text.

  72 Astraea (“starry maiden”), goddess of justice and the last god to leave the earth

  Return to text.

  73 clothing

  Return to text.

  74 travel quickly

  Return to text.

  75 dirty, repulsive

  Return to text.

  76 pain, grief

  Return to text.

  77 i.e., in the preceding part, which is a pun-filled “Prolusion”

  Return to text.

  78 obvious, bare, plain

  Return to text.

  79 suspicion

  Return to text.

  80 boxes, chests

  Return to text.

  81 thoroughly, all over

  Return to text.

  82 Zeus and Hera’s daughter; cupbearer to the gods

  Return to text.

  83 layers

  Return to text.

  84 old woman, grandmother

  Return to text.

  85 see Homer’s Odyssey 8:499ff.

  Return to text.

  86 within the boundary

  Return to text.

  87 an academic pun: predicament = (1) term used in Aristotelian rhetoric, (2) Milton’s difficulty with his “wand’ring muse”

  Return to text.

  88 place

  Return to text.

  89 unlucky, disastrous, dreadful

  Return to text.

  90 chance, luck

  Return to text.

  91 prophetess, fortune-teller, witch

  Return to text.

  92 apart

  Return to text.

  93 outdistance, surpass

  Return to text.

  94 attribute, quality, nature

  Return to text.

  95 one George Rivers (or his brother, Nizell) played the part of Relation

  Return to text.

  96 outermost

  Return to text.

  97 on the border of England and Scotland

  Return to text.

  98 the Don, in Yorkshire

  Return to text.

  99trente= “thirty,” in French, and the Trent takes its name therefrom

  Return to text.

  100 see the story of the river nymph Sabrina in Comus, lines 824ff.

  Return to text.

  101 the river runs past Newcastle, proverbial for its coal

  Return to text.

  102 i.e., is supposedly named for a Scythian chief who drowned in that river

  Return to text.

  103 the Thames, which runs past various royal castles

  Return to text.

  104 crime, fault, penalty

  Return to text.

  105 unbearable, intolerable

  Return to text.

  106 was accustomed

  Return to text.

  107 residence/offices of a sovereign

  Return to text.

  108 style, talent

  Return to text.

  109 effect, accomplish

  Return to text.

  110 style, tone

  Return to text.

  111 the horses pulling the sun god’s chariot

  Return to text.

  112 impression, stamp

  Return to text.

  113 the three Magi/wise men

  Return to text.

  114 come before [pre= before, venir= come]

  Return to text.

  115 poorly, shabbily

  Return to text.

  116 rough, coarse, inelegant

  Return to text.

  117 feeding trough in stable/barn

  Return to text.

  118 reverential wonder

  Return to text.

  119 laid aside, taken away, taken off

  Return to text.

  120 brilliant, fine

  Return to text.

  121 adornment

  Return to text.

  122 joyful, lively, lustful

  Return to text.

  123 forehead, face

  Return to text.

  124 corrupted, foul, filthy, stained [adjective]

  Return to text.

  125 abashed, ashamed

  Return to text.

  126 forerunner (advance person)

  Return to text.

  127 with hook/scythelike protrusions? a hook-shaped chariot?

  Return to text.

  128 respectful, reverential

  Return to text.

  129 hushed, silent

  Return to text.

  130 rage, roar

  Return to text.

  131 the morning star, not (in this usage) Satan

  Return to text.

  132 place

  Return to text.

  133 as if

  Return to text.

  134 moment, instant

  Return to text.

  135 simple, humble

  Return to
text.

  136 gripped, seized, charmed (the “stringèd noise” took “all their souls in blissful rapture”)

  Return to text.

  137 cadence

  Return to text.

  138 the moon

  Return to text.

  139 prepared, dressed

  Return to text.

  140 inexpressible

  Return to text.

  141 rolling, tossing, tumbling

  Return to text.

  142 full of moral blemishes/defects

  Return to text.

  143 suffering, mourning

  Return to text.

  144 houses, tents

  Return to text.

  145 similar

  Return to text.

  146 delicate, gauzy texture

  Return to text.

  147 meeting of a deliberative council [trisyllabic]

  Return to text.

  148 fearful, awe-inspiring

  Return to text.

  149 narrower, tighter

  Return to text.

  150 wrathful, indignant

  Return to text.

  151 lashes, brandishes, whips

  Return to text.

  152 prognosticate

  Return to text.

  153 slope

  Return to text.

  154 prompts, animates

  Return to text.

  155 silver-leafed?

  Return to text.

  156 local spirit (pagan)

  Return to text.

  157 Roman household and hearth gods

  Return to text.

  158 Roman priests

  Return to text.

  159 odd, strange

  Return to text.

  160 separate

  Return to text.

  161 spiritual/divine being

  Return to text.

  162 mountain/Phoenician sun god

  Return to text.

  163 followers of Baal

  Return to text.

  164 Phoenician moon goddess

  Return to text.

  165 encircled

  Return to text.

  166 Ammon, Egyptian god with the head of a ram

  Return to text.

  167 withers

  Return to text.

  168 Phoenician Adonis

  Return to text.

  169 deity associated with Baal

  Return to text.

  170 into which babies were thrown, as sacrifices to Moloch

  Return to text.

  171 animal-like/shaped

  Return to text.

  172 Egyptian earth goddess, horned like a cow

  Return to text.

  173 Egyptian sun god, Isis’ son

  Return to text.

  174 son of Orus, dog/ jackal-headed

  Return to text.

  175 chief of the Egyptian gods, portrayed as a black bull

  Return to text.

  176 see line 220, below

  Return to text.

  177 percussion instrument, tambourinelike

 

‹ Prev