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traces upon the English language, _e.g._ influence, disastrous, ill-starred, ascendant, etc. See also l. 360. 337. ~taper~; here a vocative, the verb being "visit (thou)." 338. ~though a rush candle~, _i.e._ 'though it be only a rush-candle'; a rush light, obtained from the pith of a rush dipped in oil. 340. ~long levelled rule~; straight horizontal beam of light: comp. _Par. Lost_, iv. 543, "the setting sun ... _Levelled_ his evening rays." The instrument with which straight lines are drawn is called a _rule_ or ruler. 341. ~star of Arcady Or Tyrian Cynosure~; here put by synecdoche for 'lode-star.' More particularly, the star of Arcady signifies any of the stars in the constellation of the Great Bear, by which Greek sailors steered; and 'Tyrian Cynosure' signifies the stars comprising that part of the constellation of the Lesser Bear which, from its shape, was called _Cynosura_, the dog's tail (Greek +kynos oura+), and by which Phoenician or Tyrian sailors steered. See _L'Alleg._ 80, "The _cynosure_ of neighbouring eyes," where the word is used as a common noun = point of attraction. Both constellations are connected in Greek mythology with the Arcadian nymph Callisto, who was turned by Zeus into the Great Bear while her son Arcas became the Lesser Bear. Milton follows the Roman poets in associating these stars with Arcadia on this account. 343. ~barred~, debarred or barred _from_. 344. ~wattled cotes~: enclosures made of hurdles, _i.e._ frames of plaited twigs. _Cote_, _cot_, and _coat_ are varieties of the same word = a covering or enclosure. 345. ~oaten stops~: see _Lyc._ 33, "the _oaten_ flute"; 88, "But now my _oat_ proceeds"; 188, "the tender stops of various _quills_." The shepherd's pipe, being at first a row of oaten stalks, "the oaten pipe," "oat," etc., came to denote any instrument of this kind and even to signify "pastoral poetry." The 'stops' are the holes over which the player's fingers are placed, also called vent-holes or "ventages" (_Ham._ iii. 2. 372). See also note on 'azurn,' l. 893. 346. ~whistle ... lodge~, _i.e._ the sound of the shepherd calling his dog by whistling. Or it may be used in the same sense as in _L'Alleg._ 63, "the ploughman _whistles_ o'er the furrowed land." 347. ~Count ... dames~: comp. _L'Alleg._ 52, "the cock ... Stoutly struts his _dames_ before"; 114, "Ere the first cock his matin rings." Grammatically, 'count' (infinitive) forms with 'cock' the complex
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