Sky lowered and muttering thunder lines taken from
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"Sky lowered, and muttering Thunder, some sad drops / Wept at completing of the mortal Sin".
These lines are taken from the epic poem, "Paradise Lost".
In this book, John Milton declares that his aim in the poem is “to justify the ways of God to men.
These lines are out of context, "Sky" registers as the subject and tears as the object of the sentence, but we nonetheless reject the mental image of a sky with eyes:
the personification cuts off when visual and other proprieties are about to be violated.
These lines are taken from the epic poem, "Paradise Lost".
In this book, John Milton declares that his aim in the poem is “to justify the ways of God to men.
These lines are out of context, "Sky" registers as the subject and tears as the object of the sentence, but we nonetheless reject the mental image of a sky with eyes:
the personification cuts off when visual and other proprieties are about to be violated.
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