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be dreams in the more obvious sense of that word-visions which had haunted the slumbers of Urania. 1. 8. _Swift as a thought by the snake memory stung._ The context suggests that the 'thought' here in question is a grievous thought, and the term 'the snake memory' conveys therefore a corresponding impression of pain. Shelley however had not the usual feeling of repulsion or abhorrence for snakes and serpents. Various passages could be cited to prove this; more especially Canto 1 of _The Revolt of Islam,_ where the Spirit of Good is figured under the form of a serpent. 1. 9. _Front her ambrosial rest the fading Splendour sprung._ Urania. She is in her own nature a splendour, or celestial deity: at the present moment her brightness is 'fading,' as being overcast by sorrow and dismay. 'Her ambrosial rest' does not appear to signify anything more precise than 'her rest, proper to an immortal being.' The forms 'sprung, sung,' &c. are constantly used by Shelley instead of 'sprang, sang,' &c. +Stanza 23,+ 1. 5. _Had left the Earth a corpse._ Shelley, in this quasi-Greek poem, takes no count of the fact that the sun, when it ceases to illumine one part of the earth, is shining upon another part. He treats the unillumined part as if it were the whole earth--which has hereby become 'a corpse.' +Stanza 24,+ 1. 2, _Through camps and cities_, &c. In highly figurative language, this stanza pictures the passage of Urania from 'her secret paradise' to the death-chamber of Adonais in Rome, as if the spiritual essence and external form of the goddess were wounded by the uncongenial atmosphere of human malice and detraction through which she has to pass. The whole description is spiritualized from that of Bion (p. 63):-- 'Wildered, ungirt, unsandalled--the thorns pierce Her hastening feet, and drink her sacred blood.' 11. 4,5. _The invisible Palms of her tender feet._ Shelley more than once uses 'palms' for 'soles' of the feet. See _Prometheus Unbound_, Act 4:-- 'Our feet now, every palm, Are sandalled with calm'; and _The Triumph of Life_:-- 'As she moved under the mass Of the deep cavern, and, with palms so tender Their tread broke not the mirror of the billow, Glided along the river.' Perhaps Shelley got this usage from the Italian: in that language the web-feet of aquatic birds are termed 'palme.' 11. 8, 9. _Whose sacred blood, like the young tears of May, Paved with eternal flowers that
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