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Seated as on the top of Virtue's hill,"
Discountenance her despised, and put to rout
All her array; her female pride deject,

Or turn to reverent awe! for beauty stands

In the admiration only of weak minds

Led captive; cease to admire, and all her plumes
Fall flat, and shrink into a trivial toy,

At every sudden slighting quite abash'd.'
Therefore with manlier objects we must try
His constancy; with such as have more show

Of worth, of honour, glory, and popular praise;
Rocks, whereon greatest men have oftest wreck'd;
Or that which only seems to satisfy
Lawful desires of nature, not beyond:

And now I know he hungers, where no food

Is to be found, in the wide wilderness :
The rest commit to me; I shall let pass

No advantage, and his strength as oft assay.

One look from his majestick brow,

Seated as on the top of Virtue's hill.

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Here is the construction that we so often meet with in Milton: "from his majestick brow," that is, from the majestic brow of him seated as on the top of Virtue's hill: and the expression of "Virtue's hill," was probably in allusion to the rocky eminence on which the Virtues are placed in the Table of Cebes; or the arduous ascent up the hill, to which Virtue is represented pointing in the best designs of the Judgment of Hercules.-NEWTON.

Milton's meaning here is best illustrated by a passage in Shakespeare, which most probably he had in his mind. Hamlet, in the scene with his mother, pointing to the picture of his father, says,

See what a grace was sented on this brow!
Hyperion's curls; the front of Jove himself;
An eye like Mars to threaten or command, &c.

See

See also "Love's Labour's Lost," a. iii. s. 4. "Greatness, nobleness, authority, and awe," says Bentley, "are by all Greek and Latin poets placed in the forehead." "Par. Lost," b. vii. 509. ix. 538.

And Spenser's Belphoebe :

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Among Milton's early Latin Elegies, we find one, the seventh, of the amatory kind: but when he published his Latin poems, eighteen years afterwards, he thought it neces sary to add to it ten lines, apologizing for the puerile weakness, or rather vacancy, of his mind, that could admit such an impression.-DUNSTER.

b Cease to admire, and all her plumes
Fall flat, and shrink into a trivial toy,
At
every sudden slighting quite abash'd.

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This is a very beautiful and apposite allusion to the peacock; speaking of which bird, Pliny notices the circumstance of its spreading its tail under a sense of admiration :"Gemmantes laudatus expandit colores, adverso maxime sole, quia sic fulgentius radiant.' Nat. Hist. 1. x. c. 20. Tasso compares Armida, in all the pride and vanity of her beauty and ornaments, to a peacock with its tail spread, cxvi. st. 24. But Milton had here in his mind Ovid, "De Arte Am." i. 627.

Landatas ostentat avis Junonia pennas;

Si tacitus spectes, illa recondit opes.-DUNSTER.

He ceased, and heard their grant in loud acclaim;
Then forthwith to him takes a chosen band

d

Of spirits, likest to himself in guile,
To be at hand, and at his beck appear,

If cause were to unfold some active scene

Of various persons, each to know his part;
Then to the desert takes with these his flight;
Where still from shade to shade the Son of God,
After forty days' fasting, had remain'd,

Now hungering first, and to himself thus said:

c He ceased.

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Our Lord (ver. 110) is, in a brief but appropriate description, again presented to us in the wilderness. The poet, in the mean time, makes Satan return to his infernal council, to report the bad success of his first attempt, and to demand their counsel and assistance in an enterprise of so much difficulty. This he does in a brief and energetic speech. Hence arises a debate; or at least a proposition on the part of Belial, and a rejection of it by Satan, of which I cannot sufficiently express my admiration. The language of Belial is exquisitely descriptive of the power of beauty; without a single word introduced, or even a thought conveyed, that is unbecoming its place in this divine poem. Satan's reply is eminently fine: his imputing to Belial, as the most dissolute of the fallen angels, the amours attributed by the poets and mythologists to the heathen gods; while it is replete with classic beauty, furnishes an excellent moral to those extravagant fictions; and his description of the little effect which the most powerful enticements can produce on the resolute mind of the virtuous, while it is heightened with many beautiful turns of language, is, in its general tenor, of the most superior and dignified kind. Indeed, all this part of his speech (from ver. 191 to ver. 225) seems to breathe such a sincere and deep sense of the charms of real goodness, that we almost forget who is the speaker: at least, we readily subscribe to what he had said of himself in the first book:

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After such sentiments so expressed, it might have been thought difficult for the poet to return to his subject, by making the arch-fiend resume his attempts against the Divine Person, the commanding majesty of whose invincible virtue he had just been describing with such seemingly heartfelt admiration. This is managed with much address, by Satan's proposing to adopt such modes of temptation as are apt to prevail most where the propensities are virtuous, and where the disposition is amiable and generous: and, by the immediate return of the tempter and his associates to the wilderness, the poem advances towards the heighth of its argument.-DUNSTER.

d To him takes a chosen band Of spirits, likest to himself in guile.

"Then goeth he and taketh with himself seven other spirits more wicked than himself," Matt. xii. 45.-DUNSTER.

• Now hungering first.

There seems, I think, to be a little inaccuracy in this place. It is plain, by the Scripture account, that our Saviour hungered before the devil first tempted him by proposing to him his making stones into bread, and Milton's own account in the first book is consistent with this: is there not therefore a seeming impropriety in saying that he "now first hungered;" especially, considering the time that must have necessarily elapsed during Satan's convening and consulting with his companions?-THYER.

Milton comprises the principal action of the poem in four successive days. This is the second day, in which no positive temptation occurs; for Satan had left Jesus (as was said, ver. 116 of this book) "vacant," i. e. unassailed, that day. Previous to the tempter's appearing at all, it is said (b. i. 303) that our blessed Lord had "passed full forty days" in the wilderness. All that is here meant is that he was not hungry till the forty days were ended; and accordingly our Saviour himself presently says that, during the time, he

human food

Nor tasted, nor had appetite.

As to the time necessary for convening the infernal council, there is the space of

Where will this end? four times ten days I've pass'd
Wandering this woody maze, and human food
Nor tasted, nor had appetite; that fast
To virtue I impute not, or count part
Of what I suffer here; if nature need not,
Or God support nature without repast
Though needing, what praise is it to endure?
But now I feel I hunger, which declares
Nature hath need of what she asks; yet God
Can satisfy that need some other way,
Though hunger still remain: so it remain
Without this body's wasting, I content me,
And from the sting of famine fear no harm;
Nor mind it, fed with better thoughts, that feed
Me hungering more to do my Father's will."

It was the hour of night, when thus the Son
Communed in silent walk, then laid him down
Under the hospitable covert nigh

Of trees thick interwoven ; there he slept,

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twenty-four hours taken for the devil to go up to "the region of mid air," where his council was sitting, and where we are told he went "with speed;" (ver. 117 of this book) and for him to debate the matter with his council and return "with his chosen band of spirits:" for it was the commencement of night when he left our Saviour at the end of the first book; and it is now "the hour of night" (ver. 260), when he is returned. But it must also be considered that spiritual beings are not supposed to require, for their actions, the time necessary to human ones; otherwise we might proceed to calculate the time requisite for the descent of Michael, or Raphael, to Paradise, and criticise the "Paradise Lost" accordingly. But Raphael, in the eighth book of that poem, says to Adam, inquiring concerning celestial motions;

The swiftness of those circles attribute,
Though numberless, to his Omnipotence,

That to corporeal substances could add

Speed almost spiritual: me thou think'st not slow,
Who since the inorning hour set out from heaven
Where God resides, and ere mid-day arrived
In Eden; distance inexpressible

By numbers that have name.

We are also expressly told by St. Luke, when the devil took our Lord up into a high mountain, that "he showed unto him all the kingdoms of the world in a moment of time," Luke iv. 5.-DUNSTER.

Me hungering more to do my Father's will.

In allusion to our Saviour's words, John iv. 34:-"My meat is to do the will of him that sent me, and to finish his work."-Newton.

But with reference also to, "Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness," Matt. v. 6.-DUNSTER.

Communed in silent walk, then laid him down.

Agreeable to what we find in the Psalms, iv. 4:-" Commune with your own heart upon your bed, and be still."-NEWTON.

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And dream'd, as appetite is wont to dream,

Of meats and drinks, nature's refreshment sweet:

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Him thought, he by the brook of Cherith stood,
And saw the ravens with their horny beaks

Food to Elijah bringing, even and morn,

Though ravenous, taught to abstain from what they brought:
He saw the prophet also, how he fled

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Into the desert, and how there he slept
Under a juniper; then how, awaked,"
He found his supper on the coals prepared,
And by the angel was bid rise and eat,
And eat the second time after repose,

The strength whereof sufficed him forty days:
Sometimes that with Elijah he partook,
Or as a guest with Daniel at his pulse.

Thus wore out night; and now the herald lark
Left his ground-nest, high towering to descry

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The morn's approach, and greet her with his song :i
As lightly from his grassy couch up rose

iHe by the brook of Cherith stood, &c.

Alluding to the account of Elijah, 1 Kings xvii. 5, 6; and xix. 4. And Daniel's living upon pulse and water, rather than the portion of the king's meat and drink, is celebrated, Dan. i. So that as our dreams are often composed of the matter of our waking thoughts, our Saviour is with great propriety supposed to dream of sacred persons and subjects. Lucretius, iv. 960:

Et quoi quisque fere studio devinctus adhæret,
Aut quibus in rebus multum sumus ante morati,
Atque in qua ratione fuit contenta magis mens,
In somnis eadem plerumque videmur obire.-NEWTON.

¿ To descry

The morn's approach, and greet her with his song.

This is a beautiful thought, which modern wit hath added to the stock of antiquity. We may see it rising, though out of a low hint of Theocritus, like the bird from his "thatch'd pallat,” Idyll. x. 50.

Chaucer leads the way to the English poets, in four of the finest lines in all his works, "Knight's Tale," 1493:

The merry lark, messengere of the day,
Salewith in her song the morrow gray;
And firy Phebus risith up so bright,
That all the Orient laugheth at the sight.

In the same manner, Spenser, "Faery Queen," 1. xi. 51:

When Una did her mark

Climb to her charet all with flowers spread,

From heaven high to chase the cheerless dark;

With merry notes her loud salutes the mounting lark.-CALTON.

Thus, in "Comus," the early hour of morning is marked by the lark's rousing from his thatch'd pallat, ver. 315; and the lark, high-towering and greeting the morn with ter song, is thus beautifully described in P. Fletcher's "Purple Island," c. ix. st. 2:— The cheerful lark, mounting from early bed, With sweet salutes awakes the drowsy light: The earth she left, and up to heaven is filed: There chants her Maker's praises out of sight.

See also Spenser's Astrophel. st. vi. :

As summers lark, that with her song doth greete
The dawning day, &c.-DUNSTER.

* From his grassy couch.

So in "Paradise Lost," b. iv. 600:

For beast and bird,
They to their grassy couch, these to their nests,
Were slunk.THYER.

Our Saviour, and found all was but a dream;1
Fasting he went to sleep, and fasting waked.
Up to a hill anon his steps he rear'd,
From whose high top to ken the prospect round,
If cottage were in view, sheep-cote, or herd;
But cottage, herd, or sheep-cote, none he saw;'
Only in a bottom saw a pleasant grove,"
With chant of tuneful birds resounding loud:
Thither he bent his way, determined there
To rest at noon; and enter'd soon the shade

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1 And found all was but a dream.

"Paradise Lost," b. v. 92.

But O! how glad I waked,
To find this but a dream!-DUNSTER.

m If cottage were in view, sheep-cote, or herd;
But cottage, herd, or sheep-cote, none he saw.

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This mode of repetition our poet is fond of, and has frequently used with singular effect. See "Comus," v. 221, &c. Thus also, in "Paradise Lost," b. iv. 640, a delightful description of morning, evening, and night is beautifully recapitulated.-DUNster.

■ Only in a bottom saw a pleasant grove,

&c.

The tempter here is the magician of the Italian poets. This "pleasant grove" is a magical creation in the desert, designed as a scene suited for the ensuing temptation of the banquet. Thus Tasso lays the scene of the sumptuous banquet, which Armida provides for her lovers, amidst

High trees, sweet meadows, waters pure and good,
Under the curtain of the greenwood shade,
Beside the brook, upon the velvet grass.

FAIRFAX'S "Tasso," c. x. 63, 64.

The whole of Milton's description here is very beautiful; and I rather wonder that the noble author of the "Anecdotes of Painting" did not subjoin it to his citations from the "Paradise Lost," in the "Observations on Modern Gardening." He there ascribes to our author the having foreseen, with "the prophetic eye of taste," our modern style of gardening. It may however be questioned, whether his idea of a garden was much, if at all, elevated above that of his contemporaries. In the "Comus," speaking of the gardens of the Hesperides, he describes "cedarn alleys," and "crisped shades and bowers;" and in his "Penseroso," "retired leisure" is made to please itself in "trim gardens." Mr. Warton, in a note on the latter passage, observes that Milton had changed his ideas of a garden when he wrote his "Paradise Lost:" but the Paradise which he there describes is not a garden, either ancient or modern: it is in fact a country in its natural, unornamented state; only rendered beautiful, and (which is more essential to happiness in a hot climate) at all times perfectly habitable, from its abundance of pleasingly-disposed shade and water, and its consequent verdure and fertility. From all such poetical delineations, as from Nature herself, the landscape-gardener may certainly enrich his fancy and cultivate his taste. The poet in the mean time contributes to the perfection of art, not by laying down rules for it, but by his exquisite descriptions of the more beautiful scenes of nature, which it is the office of art to imitate and to represent. One merit of our modern art of laying out ground, independent of the beauty of its scenery, is its being peculiarly adapted to the circumstances of our climate. A modern English pleasure-ground would not be considered as a Paradise on the sultry plains of Assyria, if it could be formed or exist there: accordingly, another mode of gardening has always prevailed in hot countries, which, though it would be the height of absurdity to adopt in our own island, may be well defended in its proper place by the best of all pleas, necessity. The reader may see this question fully discussed with great taste and judgment, by my learned friend Dr. Falconer, in his "Historical View of the Taste for Gardening and laying out grounds among the Nations of Antiquity."-DUNSTER.

• Determined there

To rest at noon.

The custom of retiring to the shade and reposing, in hot countries, during the extreme heat of the day, is frequently alluded to by Milton, in his "Paradise Lost." See b. iv. 627; b. v. 230 and 300; and b. ix. 401.-DUNSTER.

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