Eleg. III. In obitum Præsulis Wintoniensis, l. 47.

And now I will give Thomas Warton's note in full. He says:

"I know not where this fiction is to be found. But our author has given a glorious description of a palace of Lucifer in the Paradise Lost, b. v. 757.:

"'At length into the limits of the North

They came, and Satan to his royal seat

High on a hill, far blazing, as a mount,

Rais'd on a mount, with pyramids and towers

From diamond quarries hewn, and rocks of gold,

The Palace of Great Lucifer, so call

That structure, in the dialect of men