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hese verses appears beautiful, the other ordinary. For AEschylus in his Philoctetes says, "The poisonous wound that eats my flesh." But Euripides for ([Greek: esthiei]) "eats" says ([Greek: thoinatai]) "banquets on."] [Footnote 9: [this]] [Footnote 10: This is not particularly observed. On the very first page of P. L. we have a line with the final y twice sounded before a vowel, Invoke thy aid to my adventurous song. Again a few lines later, That to the height of this great argument I may assert Eternal Providence. Ten lines farther we read of the Serpent Stirr'd up with envy and revenge. We have only an apparent elision of y a few lines later in his aspiring To set himself in glory above his peers, for the line would be ruined were the y to be omitted by a reader. The extreme shortness of the two unaccented syllables, y and a, gives them the quantity of one in the metre, and allows by the turn of voice a suggestion of exuberance, heightening the force of the word glory. Three lines lower Milton has no elision of the y before a vowel in the line, Against the throne and monarchy of God. Nor eight lines after that in the words day and night. There is elision of y in the line, That were an ignominy and shame beneath This downfall. But none a few lines lower down in Sole reigning holds the tyranny of heaven. When the y stands by itself, unaccented, immediately after an accented syllable, and precedes a vowel that is part of another unaccented syllable standing immediately before an accented one, Milton accepts the consequence, and does not attempt to give it the force of a distinct syllable. But Addison's vague notion that it was Milton's custom to cut off the final y when it precedes a vowel, and that for the sake of being uncommon, came of inaccurate observation. For the reasons just given, the y of the word glory runs into the succeeding syllable, and most assuredly is not cut off, when we read of the excess Of Glory obscured: as when the sun, new ris'n, Looks through the horizontal misty air, but the y in misty stands as a full syllable because the word air is accented. So again in Death as oft accused Of tardy execution, since denounc'd The day of his offence. The y of tardy is a syllable because the vowel following it is accented; the y also of day remains, because, although an unaccented vowel follows, it is itself pa
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