"[370]
There is one almost perfect quatrain,--
"Before thy fellows, ambitious to win
From me some plume, that thy success may show
Destruction to the rest. This pause between
(Unanswered lest thou boast) to let thee know";
and another hardly less so, of a rhyme and an assonance,--
"If once they hear that voice, their liveliest pledge
Of hope in fears and dangers, heard so oft
In worst extremes and on the perilous edge
Of battle when it raged, in all assaults."
There can be little doubt that the rhymes in the first passage cited were
intentional, and perhaps they were so in the others; but Milton's ear has
tolerated not a few perfectly rhyming couplets, and others in which the
assonance almost becomes rhyme, certainly a fault in blankverse:--
"From the Asian Kings (and Parthian among these),
From India and the Golden Chersonese";
"That soon refreshed him wearied, and repaired
What hunger, if aught hunger, had impaired";
"And will alike be punished, whether thou
Reign or reign not, though to that gentle brow";
"Of pleasure, but all pleasure to destroy,
Save what is in destroying, other joy";
"Shall all be Paradise, far happier place
Than this of Eden, and far happier days";
"This my long sufferance and my day of grace
They who neglect and scorn shall never taste";
"So far remote with diminution seen,
First in his East the glorious lamp was seen.
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