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Some close design, or turn of womankind.
To work in close design, by fraud or guile.

Join Thy pleaded reason.
Approv'd His pleaded reason.

Approved My pleaded reason.

Since wide he wander'd on the wat'ry waste.
Wandering that watery desert.
Wander'd this barren waste.

Where on the flow'ry herb as soft he lay.
Soft on the flowery herb I found me laid.
In thick shelter of innum'rous boughs.
In this close dungeon of innumerous boughs.

The cool translucent springs.

The pure, translucent springs.

Thames' translucent wave.

Under the glassy, cool, translucent wave.

Ever-during shade.

Ever-during dark.

(Of eyesight in each case.)

Nor, till oblique he [Phoebus] slop'd his ev'ning ray.

Oft till the star that rose at evening bright

.... had sloped his westering wheel.

With sweet, reluctant, amorous delay.
And sweet, reluctant, amorous delay.

In shelter thick of horrid shade reclin'd.
In thick shelter of black shades imbower'd.
Dusk with horrid shades.

Our groans the rocks remurmur'd to the main.
Their moans The vales redoubled to the hills.

As huge in length extended lay the beast.
So stretch'd out huge in length the Arch-Fiend lay.
Darkness cover'd o'er The face of things.
[The moon] Shadowy sets off the face of things.
No more was seen the human form divine.
Not to me returns . . . or human face divine.
This said, and scornful turning from the shore
My haughty step, I stalk'd the valley o'er.
So spoke the wretch; but shunning farther fray,
Turn'd his proud step, and left them.
So saying, his proud step he scornful turn'd.
On his bloomy face

Youth smil'd celestial, with each op'ning grace.
In his face

Youth smiled celestial, and to every limb
Suitable grace diffused.

There seek the Theban Bard, depriv'd of sight;
Within, irradiate with prophetic light.
So much the rather thou, celestial Light,
Shine inward, and the mind through all her powers
Irradiate. [Of the blind Milton.]

Odyssey, v. 224.
P. L. i. 646.

Ib. v. 454-5.
Ib. vii. 307-8.
P. L. viii. 509–10.

Ib. v. 497.
P. L. xỉ. 779.
P. R. i. 354.

Ibay. 597.

P. L. viii. 254.

Ib. v. 606.
Comus, 349.

Ib. vii. 231, X. 434.
Ib. xvii. 105.

On his Grotto, I.
Comus, 861.

Odyssey, vii. 306.
P. L. iii. 45; cf. vii. 206.

Ib. vii. 372.

Lycidas, 30-31.

Ib. ix. 32.
P. L. iv. 311.

Ib. ix. 219.
Comus, 62.

P. R. i. 296.

Ib. x. 60.

Piemont sonnet, 8-9.

Ib. x. 206.

P.

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Ib. x. 210-11, xiv. 510-11.

P. L. v. 43; cf. vii. 636.

Ib. x. 278.

P. L. iii. 41-4.

Ib. x. 325-6.

Ib. xvii. 304-5.
P. L. iv. 536.

Ib. x. 331-2.

P. L. iii. 637-9.

Ib. x. 582-3.

P. L. iii. 51-3.

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1 Most of these parallels were collected before Mr. G. C. Macaulay's life of Thomson appeared, and a number of them are not in his list (pp. 141-5). I am indebted to him, however, for six of those given above; and I think, as he does, that "the winter evening's occupations (Winter, 424-655] are partly suggested by Milton, those of the student, who holds 'high converse with the mighty dead' by Il Penseroso, and those of the village and the city by L'Allegro" (p. 144), but it is hardly practicable to quote two hundred lines to prove it. I have taken nothing from Mr. J. E. Wells's article in Modern Language Notes, xxiv. 60-61, though perhaps I should have included "where cowslips hang The dewy head" (Spring, 448–9; cf. Lycidas, 147).

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The winding vale its lavish stores, Irriguous, spreads. Ib. 494-5.

The irriguous vale.

Some irriguous valley spread her store.

The stately-sailing swan

Gives out his snowy plumage to the gale,

And, arching proud his neck, with oary feet
Bears forward fierce.

The boat light-skimming stretched its oary wings.
The swan, with arched neck

Between her white wings mantling proudly, rows
Her state with oary feet.

Sportive lambs,

This way and that convolved in friskful glee. [Bees] Convolved and agonizing in the dust. Satan... writhed him to and fro convolved.

Autumn, 751.
P. L. iv. 255.

Spring, 778-81.
Autumn, 129.

P. L. vii. 438-40.

Spring, 836-7.
Autumn, 1183.
P. L. vi. 327-8.

With woods o'erhung, and shagged with mossy rocks. Spring, 910.

Scenes,

Of horrid prospect, shag the trackless plain.

By grots and caverns shagg'd with horrid shades.

Winter, 280-81.

Comus, 429.

Spring, 954.

Ancient seats, with venerable oaks Embosomed high. Liberty, v. 52–3.

And villages embosomed soft in trees.

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Prime cheerer, Light!

Of all material beings first and best!

Efflux divine! Nature's resplendent robe,

Without whose vesting beauty all were wrapt

In unessential gloom; and thou, O Sun! . . . in whom . . .

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Or of the Eternal coeternal beam

May I express thee unblamed? since God is light,

And never but in unapproached light
Dwelt from eternity, dwelt then in thee,
Bright effluence of bright essence increate!
Unessential Night.

While, round thy beaming car,
High-seen, the Seasons lead, in sprightly dance
Harmonious knit, the rosy-fingered hours.
[The moon] Leads on the gentle hours.
Thy graces they, knit in harmonious dance.
While universal Pan,

Knit with the Graces and the Hours in dance,
Led on the eternal Spring.

The unfruitful rock itself, impregned by thee.
When he [Jupiter] impregns the clouds.

Half in a blush of clustering roses lost.
Half spied, so thick the roses bushing round.

P. L. iii. 1-6.

P. L. ii. 439.

Ib. 120-22.
Spring, 1037.
Liberty, v. 684.

P. L. iv. 266-8.

Summer, 140.
P. L. iv. 500.

Ib. 205.
P. L. ix. 426.

("Blushing" is the reading of the 1720 text.)

On the mingling boughs they sit embowered.
Oh! bear me then to vast embowering shades.
In thick shelter of black shades imbower'd.
The Etrurian shades High over-arch'd embower.

The scenes where ancient bards...
Conversed with angels and immortal forms,
On gracious errands bent-to save the fall

Of virtue struggling on the brink of vice.

Ib. 228.
Autumn, 1030.
Comus, 62.

P. L. i. 303-4.

Summer, 523-7.

(Perhaps suggested by the visit of Raphael to warn Adam and Eve: P. L., book v.)

Here frequent, at the visionary hour,

When musing midnight reigns or silent noon,

Angelic harps are in full concert heard,

And voices chaunting from the wood-crown'd hill,

The deepening dale, or inmost sylvan glade.

How often, from the sleep

Of echoing hill or thicket, have we heard
Celestial voices to the midnight air . . .
With heavenly touch of instrumental sounds
In full harmonic number join'd.

Where the bee... loads his little thigh.
While the bee with honied thigh.

Ib. 556-60.

P. L. iv. 680-87.

Ib. 626-8.
Penseroso, 142.

Or lead me through the maze,

Embowering endless, of the Indian fig.

Summer, 670-71.

(A reference to P. L. ix. 1101-1110.)

Through the soft silence of the listening night.
Through the soft silence of the listening night.

The sober-suited songstress.
Civil-suited Morn.

Cool to the middle air.

Her wonted station in the middle air.

As up the middle sky unseen they stole.
Ruled the middle air.

Up to the middle region of thick air.

Thro' gorgeous Ind.

Bring home of either Ind the gorgeous stores.

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Ib. 745.

Upon the Circumcision, 5.

Ib. 746.

Penseroso, 122.

Ib. 768.
Ib. 1649.
Autumn, 709.
P. L. i. 516.
P. R. ii. 117.

Summer, 825.

Castle of Indolence, II. xx. 6.
Liberty, v. 27.

P. L. ii. 2-3.
Summer, 944.
P. L. ii. 1038.

Ib. 949.
Comus, 549.

Ib. 1072.
Comus, 388.

Ib. 1108-16.

P.L. vi. 478-80, 512; cf. iv. 810–18.
Samson, 549.

Ib. 1654.
Winter, 57.

P. L. v. 43; cf. vii. 636, xi. 712.

Autumn, 83; cf. Liberty, iv. 1179, V. 376.
Lines on Marlefield, 15.
P. L. i. 710-11.

(Of a building in each case.)

(Of an assembly in each case.)

Even in the height of noon oppressed, the sun
Sheds, weak and blunt, his wide-refracted ray;
Whence glaring oft, with many a broadened orb,
He frights the nations.

As when the sun new-risen

Looks through the horizontal misty air
Shorn of his beams, or from behind the moon,
In dim eclipse, disastrous twilight sheds
On half the nations, and with fear of change
Perplexes monarchs.

Autumn, 531.
P. L. i. 797.

Ib. 721-4.

P. L. i. 594-9.

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