The hidden soul. Ibid. 144.

God the Father turns a school-divine. Pope, 1st Epistle, Hor. Book II. 102.

As when heaven’s fire. Paradise Lost, I. 612–13.

[64]. All is not lost. Paradise Lost, I. 106–9.

That intellectual being. Paradise Lost, II. 147–8.

Being swallowed up. Ibid. II. 149–50.

Fallen cherub. Ibid. I. 157–8.

Rising aloft [‘he steers his flight aloft’]. Ibid. I. 225–6.

[65]. Is this the region. Ibid. I. 242–63.

[66]. His philippics against Salmasius. In 1651 Milton replied in his Defensio pro Populo Anglicano to Defensio Regia pro Carolo I. (1649) by Claudius Salmasius or Claude de Saumaise (1588–1658), a professor at Leyden. The latter work had been undertaken at the request of Charles II. by Salmasius, who was regarded as the leading European scholar of his day.