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505

Expos'd a matron, to avoid worfe rape.
These were the prime in order and in might;
The reft were long to tell, though far renown'd,
The Ionian Gods, of Javan's iffue; held
Gods, yet confefs'd later than Heaven and Earth,
Their boafted parents: Titan, Heaven's first-born,
With his enormous brood, and birthright feis'd
By younger Saturn; he from mightier Jove,
His own and Rhea's fon, like measure found;

"when hofpitable doors

“Yielded their matrons to prevent worse rape." Milton did well in altering the paffage; for it was not true of Sodom, that any matron was yielded there; fec Gen. xix. 8: And, as the women were only offered, not accepted, it is not proper to fay that they were yielded. But obferve that Milton, in the fecond edition changed yielded into exposed; because, in what was done at Gibeah, Judges xix. 25, the Levite's wife was not. only yielded, but put out of doors, and expos'd to the men's lewdness. PEARCE.

Ver. 506. These were the prime] Because these are the idols who are mentioned in the moft ancient records, viz. by the facred text. The Grecian and Roman deities are much later, as we have no account of them for feveral ages after Mofes; wherefore Milton confiders them as of an inferiour order and degree: and it is known too that thefe Greek and Roman deities were derived from the Gods of this country. CALLANDER.

Ver. 508. The Ionian Gods, &c.] Javan, the fourth fon of Japhet, is fuppofed to have fettled in the fouth-weft part of Afia Minor, about Ionia, which contains the radical letters of his name. His defcendants were the Ionians and Grecians; and the principal of their Gods were Heaven and Earth; Titan, the father of the giants, was their eldeft fon, and his empire was feifed by his younger brother Saturn, as Saturn's was by Jupiter. These were first known in the ifland Crete, now Candia, in which is mount Ida, where Jupiter is faid to have been born; thence paffed over into Greece, and refided on mount Olympus in Theffaly. NEWTON.

So Jove ufurping reign'd: these first in Créte
And Ida known, thence on the fnowy top 515
Of cold Olympus, rul'd the middle air,
Their highest Heaven; or on the Delphian cliff,
Or in Dodona, and through all the bounds
Of Dorick land; or who with Saturn old
Fled over Adria to the Hefperian fields,
And o'er the Celtick roam'd the utmost isles.
All these and more came flocking; but with

looks

520

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Down-caft and damp; yet fuch wherein appear'd Obfcure fome glimpse of joy, to have found their Chief

Not in despair, to have found themselves not loft In lofs itself; which on his countenance caft 526 Like doubtful hue: but he, his wonted pride

Ver. 515.

Iliad i. 420, Ολυμπον
Οὐλύμπο ΝΙΦΟΕΝΤΟΣ.

Ver. 517.

the fnowy top] So Homer calls it, ̓ΑΓΑΝΝΙΦΟΝ. Again, Il. xviii. 615. NEWTON.

the Delphian cliff,] A tranflation of SOTITTELN Aixpis wirga, Ed. Tyr, 471. Every one knows this to be the famous oracle of Apollo at Delphos; and Dodona to be the oracle of Jupiter. CALLANDER.

Ver, 519. · Dorick land; &c.] That is, Greece, Doris being a part of Greece; or fled over Adria, the Adriatick, to the Hefperian fields, Italy; and o'er the Celtick, France and the other countries over-run by the Celtes. NEWTON.

By roam'd the utmost ifles, Milton means the idols which we had from the continent. Our Saxon ancestors, coming over into England, while they were yet Pagans, brought over the worthip of their idols with them. The utmost ifles mean Britain, Ireland, and the adjacent islands, which by the Ancients were thought the utmost boundaries of the world. CALLANDER,

Soon recollecting, with high words, that bore Semblance of worth, not fubftance, gently rais'd Their fainting courage, and difpell'd their fears. Then straight commands, that at the warlike found

531

Of trumpets loud and clarions be uprear'd
His mighty ftandard: that proud honour claim'd
Azazel as his right, a Cherub tall;

534

Ver. 529. Semblance of worth, not fubftance,] Spenfer, Faer. Qu. ii. ix. 2.

"Full lively is the fembluunt, though the fubftance dead."

THYER.

Ver. 530. Their fainting courage,] In the first edition it is, "Their fainted courage; which Dr. Newton fufpects to be an errour of the prefs: Mr. Lofft, in his edition of this Book in 1792, has, however, followed the first edition, which he thinks the best reading; and which, I may add, can be fupported by a paffage in Sylvefter's Du Bart. 4to. edit. p. 5.

"Let other-fome (whofe fainted fpirits do droop)
"Down to the ground &c." TODD.

Ver. 533.

that proud honour claim'd

Azazel as his right; &c.] Dr. Spencer fhows that this name is used for fome demon or devil by several ancient authors, Jewish and Chriftian; and derives it from two Hebrew words, Az and Azel, fignifying brave in retreating; a proper appellation for the ftandard-bearer to the fallen angels. We fee, Milton gives Azazel a right to be standard-bearer on account of his ftature: He had no notion of a dapper enfign who can hardly carry his colours. NEWTON.

In the Vifion of Pierce Plowman, which Milton may be fuppofed to have read with attention, the claim of one of the allegorical perfonages to the right of the diftinction which Azazel here aflerts, requires to be noticed:

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"Age the hoar, he was in the va-ward,

"And bare the banner before Death; by right he it claimed."

Who forthwith from the glittering ftaff unfurl'd
The imperial enfign; which, full high advanc'd,
Shone like a meteor ftreaming to the wind,
With gems and golden luftre rich imblaz'd,
Seraphick arms and trophies; all the while
Sonorous metal blowing martial founds:
At which the univerfal hoft up-fent.
A fhout, that tore Hell's concave, and beyond
Frighted the reign of Chaos and old Night.
All in a moment through the gloom were seen
Ten thousand banners rife into the air

540

545

This occurs in the part of the Vision referred to by Mr. Warton, See the note on Par. Loft, B. xi. 489. Mr. Dunster agrees with me in regard to the prefent citation. TODD.

Ver. 537. Shone like a meteor ftreaming to the wind,] This brilliant expreffion, applied to the beard and hair of the Welsh Bard by Gray, has been deemed rather ludicrous:

"Loofe his beard and hoary hair

"Stream'd like a meteor to the troubled air."

Yet Gray may be defended by a paffage in the Perfian Tales of Inatulla, vol. ii. p. 41. "The circumference of his fnowy beard, like the ftreaming rays of a meteor, appear'd." TODD.

Ver. 543. reign] Reign is ufed, like the Latin regnum, for kingdom. So Spenfer, Faer. Qu. ii. vii. 21. “That ftreight did lead to Plutoes griefly rayne." NEWTON.

Ver. 545. Ten thousand banners rife into the air &c.] See Taffo's description of the Chriftian and Pagan armies preparing to engage, Gier. Lib. c. xx. ft. 28, 29. THYER.

See alfo the Adamo of Andreini, where Satan is defcribing the exultation of the devils at the fall of man, A. iii. S. iv. "Ecco di nouo ventilar ne l'aura

"Gl' infernali veffili,

"Ecco i fuoni feftanti,

"Ecco le voci tante

"Che inalzandofi al ciel gridan Vittoria." TODD.

With orient colours waving: with them rofe
A foreft huge of fpears; and thronging helms
Appear'd, and ferried fhields in thick array
Of depth immeasurable: Anon they move
In perfect phalanx to the Dorian mood
Of flutes and foft recorders; fuch as rais'd

550

Ver. 546. With orient colours waving :] So, in Comus, v. 65. "His orient liquour in a cryftal glafs:" Where Mr. Warton has obferved, that orient means richly bright from the radiance of the East; that it was a very common defcription of colour, and had long ago become literal even in the plaineft profe; and that in old agreements of glafs-painters for churches, they bargain to execute their work in orient colours. Bentley had objected to the phrafe. TODD.

Ver. 547. A forest huge of spears ;] Taffo, Gier. Lib. C. viii. ft. 17. "E intorno un bofco habbian d' hafte." TODD.

Ver. 548.

ferried] Locked one within another, linked and clafped together, from the French ferrer, to lock, to fhut close.

HUME.

Ver. 550.

to the Dorian mood

Of flutes and foft recorders;]

Milton, in his Areopagitica, ufes grave and Dorick almost as synonymous terms. "No musick must be heard, no fong be set or fung, but what is grace and Dorick." This therefore was the measure beft adapted to the fallen Angels at this juncture: And their inftruments were flutes and foft recorders, for the fame reason that Thucydides and other ancient hiftorians affign for the Lacedæmonians making ufe of these inftruments; because they inspired them with a more cool and deliberate courage, whereas trumpets and other martial mufick incited and inflamed them more to rage. See Aulus Gellius, lib. i. cap. 11, and Thucyd. lib. v. NEWTON.

Hence is to be obferved the exactnefs of Milton's judgement in appropriating the feveral inftruments to the feveral purposes which they were to ferve, and the different effects which they produced. Thus, when a doubtful hue was caft upon the countenance of Satan and his associates, and they were but little above defpair; in order to raise their fainting courage and dispel their

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