Death, ii. 727. Answer to Sin's speech, ii. 737. To her re- ply, ii. 817. Flight into Chaos, ii. 917. Chaos, ii. 951. Speech there, ii. 968. first into the world, ii. 1024. Ascent to light, &c. ii. 1034. Alights on the convex of the world's outermost orb, iii. 418. View of the world from the first step to Heaven-gate, iii. 540. Descent to it described, iii. 561. Stops at the sun, iii. 588. Dis- covers Uriel, the Angel of it, there, iii. 621. Transforms him. self to a Cherub, iii. 634. Speech to Uriel, iii. 654. Deceives him, iii. 681. Is directed by him to the world, iii. 724. And Paradise, iii. 733. Alights on mount Niphates, iii. 739. Solilo- quy, contemplating the sun, iv. 32. The first hypocrite, iv. 121. Arrives at Paradise, iv. 131. Sits on the tree of life, iv. 194. So- liloquy on view of Adam and Eve in Paradise, iv. 358. Descends from the tree of life, and assumes several animal shapes, iv. 395. Listens to Adam's discourse with Eve on God's prohibition of the tree of knowledge, iv. 408. Soliloquy on the subject of it, iv. 505. Resolves then to tempt them to disobedience, ix. 512. First attempt in the assumed shape of a toad, on Eve asleep, iv. 799. Answer to Ithuriel and Zephon, reprehending him thereon, iv. 827. Reply to their answer, iv. 851. Answer to Gabriel, iv. 886. Reply to his answer, iv. 925. To another, iv. 968. The inauguration of God the Son, the occasion of his revolt, v. 657. Speech to the next subordinate Angel of his party thereon, v. 673. The seat of his hierarchy before his fall described, v. 756. Speech to the Angels of his hierarchy thereon, v. 772. Reply to Abdiel's answer on his speech to the hierarchs of his party, v. 853. His army described, vi. 79. His port, and post there, vi. 99. An- swer to Abdiel's reply, vi. 150. Battle between his and the ce- lestial army described, vi. 205-385. His prowess in the battle, vi. 246. Encounters Michael, vi. 253. Answer to Michael's speech thereon, vi. 281. The combat described, vi. 296. Wounded by him, vi. 320. Carried off, vi. 335. His army de- feated, vi. 386. Retreats and calls a council, vi. 414. Speech in council, vi. 418. Reply to Nisroch there, vi. 469. Gives the word for renewing the battle, vi. 558. Renewed by his army, and the second battle described, vi. 569, 670. Speech on the celestial army's retreat, vi. 608. His army's entire defeat and expulsion from Heaven described, vi. 831-877. Returns from compassing the earth, to Paradise by night, in a mist, in order to
his temptation, ix. 53. loquy thereon, ix. 99.
His circuit, &c. described, ix. 62. Soli Enters the serpent, ix. 181. View (in that shape) of Eve, ix. 424. Soliloquy thereon, ix. 473. Beha- viour to her, ix. 523. Speech to her, ix. 532. Reply to her an- swer, ix. 567. The discourse (his temptation of Eve to eat the forbidden fruit) continued, ix. 732. Leaves her after eating it, ix. 784. His sentence thereon (virtually) pronounced by God the Son, x. 171. Returns to Hell to avoid his presence in Para- dise, x. 337. Meets Sin and Death upon their journey to the world on Adam's, &c. fall, x. 345. Answer to Sin's speech, x. 383. Parts with them, x. 410. Ascends his throne, at Panda- monium, x. 443. Speech to the fallen Angels assembled there, x. 459. Applauded with a hiss, x. 504. He and they trans- formed to serpents, x. 510. Further punished with an illusion of
the forbidden fruit, x. 549. Himself (the serpent) dragged in chains at the ascension of the Messiah, xii. 453. Dissolution (with the world) at his coming to judgment, xii. 545. See Similies.
Both annually continued, x. 575.
Saturn (a fallen Angel) i. 512.
Scriptures, how to be understood, xii. 511.
Seasons, their changes, respecting each clime, an effect of Adam's fall, x. 677.
Serpent described, ix. 182. After entered by Satan, ix. 495. His sentence (formally) pronounced by God the Son, as the assumed tempter of Eve, x. 163, 175. See Similies.
Sideral blasts, &c. an effect of Adam's fall, x. 692. Similies.
Adam and Eve, after their fall
to the Americans, as first seen by Columbus, ix. 1115. Their repentance-to Deuca- lion and Pyrrha's address to restore human race after their flood, xi. 8.
Adam caressing Eveto Jupiter with Juno (May showers) iv. 449. His address to her sleeping-to Zephyrus breathing on Flora, v. 15. Bower — to Pomona's arbour, v. 377. Desires to know the story of the creation, prior to his own to thirst unallayed, encreasing, vii. 66. Awaked after carnal fruition, the first effect of his fall to Samson shorn by Dalilah, ix. 1059. Sorrow on the vision of Noah's flood to a father's mourning his children all destroyed in his view at once, xi. 760.
Satan's army- their names from the sound of seas, from Paradise
Angels (celestial) the spears (of the guardians of Paradise)—to ears of corn ripe for reaping, iv. 980. Their march against to that of the birds in Paradise to receive Adam, vi. 72. Their Hallelujahs to x. 642. Appointed to expel Adam, &c. their faces to a double Janus (four) xi. to those of Argus, xi. 129. Their to the angels appearing to Jacob in
Their eyes appearance there Mahanaim, xi. 213. of Assyria, xi. 216. xii. 628.
to those in Dothan against the king Their motion to an evening mist,
Angels (fallen or infernal)
to autumnal leaves, i. 302.-
To floating sea-sedge after a storm, i. 304. Rousing at Sa- tan's command to centinels waking from sleep on duty, i. 331. Imbattling against the Angels celestial to the Egyp tian plague of locusts, i. 338. To the eruptions of the northern barbarians, i. 351. Their disposition to engage to that of the heroes of antiquity, i. 549. With them — the greatest armies in all ages since the creation pigmies, i. 573. Themselves to oaks or pines blasted, i. 612. Their searching, &c. for the materials of Pandemonium to pioneers intrenching, &c. i. 675. Their manner of raising it,
to the wind of an organ, i. 705. Assembling thereat -to bees, i. 768.—to pigmies, i. 780. to fairies, i. 781. Their applause of Mammon's speech in council- to the hollow wind after a storm, ii. 285. Their rising from council
to thunder afar off, ii. 476.
to the evening sun after
Their after various pursuits, passions, &c. to the Olympic
or Pythian games, ii. 530. To the phænomena of armies in
-To Hercules on Oeta, ii. 543. Their
numbers composing Satan's army against the celestials to the stars, v. 745. To the dew-drops, v. 746. Their applause of Satan's reply to Abdiel—to the sound of deep waters, v. 872. Thronged together after their entire defeat by God the Son to a herd of goats, vi. 856. Their re- treat to Pandemonium from the frontiers of Hell during Sa- tan's expedition to the world to the Tartar's flight before and the Persian from the Turk I I
intermediate country, x. 431. Transformation to serpents
to those sprung from the Gorgon's blood, &c. x. 526. Their appearance on the tree illusive of the forbidden fruit - to the snaky hair of Megara (one of the furies) x. 558. The fruit to the apples of Sodom, x. 561.
Chaos, atoms, their motion to the Lybian quicksands, ii. 900. Confusion there -to storming a town, ii. 920.
To Heaven and Earth (supposed) falling, &c. ii. 924.
Death and Sin, their making a bridge over Chaos to the world to polar winds, driving ice together in the (supposed) north-east passage, x. 289. The work to Neptune fixing the isle of Delos, x, 293. To Xerxes making a bridge over
the Hellespont, x. 306.
Death's instinct of Adam's fall
to the flight of birds of prey to a field of battle, x. 273. His and Satan's frowns on each other to two thunder-clouds meeting, ii. 714. Eve her hair
to the vine's tendrils, iv. 305. Her looks to the first blush of morning, v. 122. Pandora, iv. 713.
To a wood-nymph, or Venus, v. 379. To Pales or Her temptation
To a Dryad, or Delia (Diana) ix. 387. Pomona, ix. 393. To Ceres, ix. 395.
alluded to by the story of Ophion and Eurynome,
Flaming sword in Paradise, on Adam and Eve's expulsion thence to a comet, xii. 632. Its heat, &c.to the Lybian air, xii. 634.
to mount Etna (in Sicily) i. 230. lake Serbonis (in Palestine) ii. 592. Knowledge, the desires of it ing, vii. 66.
Michael, his combat with Satan
to a thirst unallayed, increas-
to two planets (the frame of
nature, supposed, dissolved) rushing in opposition to each other, vi. 310. Appearance to expel Adam, &c. from Para- dise to a man in a military vest, &c. xi. 239.
Pandemonium, or the court of Hell, its sudden rise
Paradise, the air of it to the effluvia from Arabia Felix, at sea, iv. 159. Itself to the field of Enny (in Sicily) iv. 268. to the grove of Daphne, &c. (in Thessaly) iv. 272.--
To the isle of Nysa, where Bacchus was brought up, iv. 275.
To mount Amara (in Ethiopia) iv. 280.
Raphael, his view of the world in his descent from Heaven to · Paradise to that of the moon through an optic glass, v. 261. of Delos, or Samos, from the Cyclades (isles) v.. 264. Himself to a phoenix, v. 271. To Mercury,
to Briarios, Typhon, and the Leviathan, i. 199, 201. To the sun rising in a mist, i. 594. In eclipse, i.
597. To the longest train of a comet, ii. 707. mount Teneriff, or Atlas, iv. 985. His shield
i. 284. His spear to a meteor, i. 337. The phænomenon of his ascent to Hell- gates to a fleet in the offing, ii. 636. His and Death's frowns on each other to two thunder-clouds meeting, ii. 714. Flight to the court of Chaos to a griffon's in the wilderness, ii. 943. Towards Heaven to (the ship) Argo through the Thracian Bosphorus, ii. 1016. — To Ulysses's voyage between Scylla and Charybdis, ii. 1019. Arrival at light, &c. to a weather-beaten vessel towards port, ii. 1043. · On the convex of the world's outermost orb
to a mast, i. 292. His standard
to a vulture seeking his prey, iii. 431. First view of the world to a scout's casual prospect after a dangerous journey, Of the stars orbs
of a new country or city, iii. 543. to the Hesperian gardens, &c. iii. 568. sun's orb to a spot in it differing from all astronomical ob- servations, iii. 688. Meditation on his intended attempt on the world to a gun recoiling, iv. 14. In Paradise wolf preying on a fold, iv. 183. To a thief breaking in at a house-top, &c. iv. 188. To a tyger in view of a brace of fawns, iv. 403. Detected by Ithuriel there to gunpow- der taking fire, iv. 814. Reprehended by Zephon to a steed reined, in a fret, iv. 857. His army against the celestials to the stars, v. 745. To the dew-drops,
v. 746. Their applause of his reply to Abdiel sound of deep waters, v. 872. Himself recoiling on a blow re- ceived from Michael — to a mountain sinking by an earth-
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