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His eyes were bent? I thought that "bend" is only used to descibe torso. The original sentence is, "His eyes were bent before him, and throughout his whole countenance there reigned a stony rigidity." It's from the novel 'The Fall of the House of Usher' Do you say "eyes are bent" in spoken English?
Nov 13, 2015 3:28 AM
Answers · 3
2
It's perfectly fine in English, even though it may be a little literary in tone. Here, "bent" means "angled" (ie. directed at an angle, usually downwards).
November 13, 2015
2
"His eyes were bent fixedly before him" means he was staring at the floor, even as he rocked. Normally one would say "gaze was bent", but, hey, I'm definitely not going to argue with Poe. Maybe he was being a little more visceral or unusual.
November 13, 2015
I think the phrase “bend one’s eyes” comes from the old belief that the eyes “shoot out beams” to see objects. And “bend” was a common word for pulling the string of your bow and holding it before shooting your arrow, fixing your eye on the target. So to bend one’s eye does not mean to shape it in a curve, but to fix it straight ahead on something: therefore to stare steadily or intently at, to “fix” one’s eyes on, almost as if the were attached to the thing you’re looking at.
October 9, 2023
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