The Poetical Works of John Milton


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Amongst the enthron'd gods  
and so does Milton's manuscript. Again, in line 597, Prof.  
Masson reads:  
It shall be in eternal restless change  
Self-fed and self-consumed. If this fail,  
The pillared firmament is rottenness, &c.  
But the 1645 text and Milton's manuscript read self-consum'd; after  
which word there is to be understood a metrical pause to mark the  
violent transition of the thought.  
Again in the second line of the Sonnet to a Nightingale Prof. Masson  
has:  
Warblest at eve when all the woods are still  
but the early edition, which probably follows Milton's spelling though  
in this case we have no manuscript to compare, reads 'Warbl'st.' So the  
original text of Samson, l. 670, has 'temper'st.'  
The retention of the old system of punctuation may be less defensible,  
but I have retained it because it may now and then be of use in  
determining a point of syntax. The absence of a comma, for example,  
after the word hearse in the 58th line of the Epitaph on the Marchioness  
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