[On His Having Arrived at the Age of Twenty-three]"
Lines 1-2
These lines introduce the poem's theme and create a metaphor of Time as
a bird flying away with ("stolen on his wing") Milton's youth.
Line 3
Here the poet expresses his sense of how quickly time passes: "hasting
days" and "full career."
Line 4
GLOSSARY
shew'th: showeth, shows
The poet here uses a seasonal metaphor to express that his time of life
is a "late spring" but that so far, it has not shown any "bud or blossom,"
in other words any promise of fruit or achievements in his life.
Lines 5-6
GLOSSARY
semblance: appearance, outward resemblance or look
The poet remarks that he doesn't seem as old as he is (his look
"deceives" the truth that he is practically a man).
Lines 7-8
GLOSSARY
doth: does
"Inward ripeness" continues the natural metaphor of "bud" and "blossom"
in line 4; the poet has more maturity or ripeness inside than he shows
outside, and more than some other young people, the "more timely-happy
spirits," have. But note the various possibilities in the word "endu'th."
Line 8
GLOSSARY
endu'th: provides, supplies, imbues, or clothes
The lines are grammatically inverted and could be paraphrased, "and
inward ripeness, that imbues/clothes some others, appears less in me." The
phrase "timely-happy spirits" can be understood to refer to those who are
more comfortable with their age or whose age reflects more happily their
inner being.
Lines 9-12
"It" may refer to the appearance of inward ripeness of line 7; whether
ripeness appears less or more, now or later, it shall be just right
according to his destiny, the "lot...toward which Time leads" him. Where
the octave found dissonance between his inner and outward states of
maturity, the sestet's answer is that Time and the will of heaven will
even things out according to plan.
Line 10
Note the multiple puns in this line: "measure" could mean a musical
measure or a line of verse; "even" may be an adjective modifying "measure"
or may lead the reader into the next line, "even to that same lot." Milton
often places adjectives both before and after nouns, and he likewise often
lets the word at the end of a line work in two different ways in each
line.
Lines 12-14
Critics have differed as to the precise interpretation of these lines,
but, in general, they suggest that whatever the outcome of the speaker's
life, it will be with God's knowledge and in accordance with His world.
Line 14
The "great Task-Master" is God.
Source: Exploring Poetry, Gale, 1997.
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