The Poetical Works of John Milton


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emphasis and the metric stress six times out of seven coincide, and the  
pronoun is spelt yee; where it is unemphatic, and in an unstressed  
place, it is spelt ye. Two lines are especially instructive:  
Speak yee who best can tell, ye Sons of light (l. 160);  
and  
Fountains and yee, that warble, as ye flow,  
Melodious murmurs, warbling tune his praise (l. 195).  
In v. 694 it marks, as the voice by its emphasis would mark in  
reading, a change of subject:  
So spake the false Arch-Angel, and infus'd  
Bad influence into th' unwarie brest  
Of his Associate; hee (i. e. the associate) together calls,  
&c.  
An examination of other passages, where there is no antithesis, goes to  
show that the lengthened form of the pronoun is most frequent before a  
pause (as vii. 95); or at the end of a line (i. 245, 257); or when a  
foot is inverted (v. 133); or when as object it precedes its verb (v.  
6
12; vii. 747), or as subject follows it (ix. 1109; x. 4). But as we  
might expect under circumstances where a purist could not correct his  
own proofs, there are not a few inconsistencies. There does not seem,  
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