Aaron and Moses, their mission, xii. 170. Abarim, i. 4u8. Abassin, iv. 280.
Abdiel a seraph opposes Satan, elc. v. 803. Reply to his answer, 877. His fi- delity, etc. 8w6. Retreat from Satan's party, vi. ). Soliloquy on view of him, 114. Speech, 130. Reply, 171. Encoun- ters him, 189. Vanquishes Ariel, Arioo, and Ramiel, 369.
Abel and Cain, xi. 429. Abjure, viii. 480. Abominations, i. 389.
Abraham, xii. 113, 446.
Abrupt, ii. 409.
Abstract, viii. 462.
Acanthus, ir. 696. Accaron, i. 466. Acheron, ii. 570. Actual, x. 587.
Adam and Eve, described generally, ir. 888; particularly, 29b. Their innocence, 312, 492, 738; T. 211, 303; viii. 510, (vide Innocence.) Orison, ir. 720; r. 153. Entertain the angel Raphael, 313, 391. Their nuptial bed, ir. 708. Nuptials, riii. 510. Parting preceding the temp- tation, ix. 385. Behaviour after, 1004. Naked, i05t. Reproach each other, 1187. Hide themselves from God, x. 97. Appearance before him, 109. Repen- tcnce, 1098. Expulsion from Paradise, xii. 625, (vide Similes.) Adam, his discourse with Eve on the pro- hibition of the tree of knowledge, ir. 411. To her at night, 610. Answer to her question about the nightly lumina- ries, 660. Viewing her sleeping, v. 8, Answer to her relating her dream, 94. To her weeping, 129. Discourse with the angel, 460. Continued on various subjects to, viii. 651, (ride Raphael.) His creation and dominion, etc. ix. 524. Prohibited the tree of knowledge, vii. 542; viii. 332. Account of himself, etc. on his creation, 253; of his first view of the Divine Presence, etc. 311. Speech to God, 357. Reply to God's answer, 379. Sleep on the formation of Eve de- scribed, 451. His first view of her, 481. Passion for her, 521. Discourse with Eve preceding the temptation, etc. ix. 205—384. Fears in her absence, 838. Meets her returning with the forbidden fruit, 847. Soliloquy, 896. Resolves to die with ber, 907. Eats the forbidden
fruil, 996. fncitC3 her to carnal frui- tion, (the first effecl of it,) 1011, I0i«; the place, etc. described, 1037. After- speeches 10 her, 1067, 113J, 1162. An- swers to God (the Son), calling him to judgment, x. 115, 124. The sentence pronounced on him, 197. Soliloquy thereon, 720; continued, 854. Repul- sory speech to Eve, 866. Relems towards her, 937. Resolves on submis sion to God's will, 1028. Speech 10 Eve (on Hie elfieacy of prayer, etc.), xi. 140. On the omens preceding their ex- pulsion, 193. On the view of Michael approaching, 226. Behaviour on receiv ing the message, 263. Speech to Mi- chael thereon, 295. Resignation, 370. Discourse with Michael, discovering to him in vision what should happen in Ibe world till the flood, 450—867. Dis- course with him, relating what should happen to the general resurrection, xii. 61—551. General reply to him, (reso- lutions of future obedience, etc.) 552, (vide Eve. Michael. Raphael. Similes.; Address, v. 868.
Adonis, i. 450; ix. 440. Adria, i. 520. Adust, xii. 635. Egean, i. 746. £u\a, 1. 233; iii. 470. Afer, x. 702. Affable, vii. 41. Affront, i. 391. Agra, xi. 391. Ahaz, i. 472. Ajalon, xii. 266- Aimed, vi. 317.
Air, first clouded on Adam's fall, ii. 181. Alabaster, iv. 544. Aladule, x. 435. Alcairo, i. 780. Alchemist, v. 440. Alchemy, ii. 517. Alcides, ii. 542. Alcinous, v. 341; ix. 441. Aleian, vii. 15. Altern, vii. 348. Amalthea, iv. 278. Amarant, iii. 352.
Ambition censured, ii. 482; iv. 88. Amerced, i. 609. Amiral, i. 291. Amphisbama, x. 524. Anarch, ii. 988. Andromeda, iii. 559.
Angels (celestial) obey God of choice, v. 535. Imbattled against Satan, vi. is. Their march, v. 56. Engagement, vi. 202. Retreat, 597. Renew the light,
.634. Their song on the creation, vii. 180, 252, 557, 602. On its dissolution, x. 6)1. Guardians of Paradise etc. iv. 778, 782, 81, 977; v. 287. Reascent to heaven on Adam's fall, x. 17. Appoint- ed lo expel Adam, etc. from Paradise, xi. 127. Descent there, vii. 208. assigned, viii. 220. March possessing it, etc. xii. 626, (vide God the Father and Son. Similes.) Guardians of man- kind, ix. 152.
Aneels, (fallen,) their after-slate, i. 50, 339. Numbers, 331; v. 743. Various pursuits, elc. ii. 528. Loss supplied by man's creation, iii. 677. Kxpulsion from heaven, 831—877. Transformed to ser- pents, x. sis. (vide Satan. Similes.) Angola, ii. 401. Antarctic, ix. 79. Aonian, i. 15. Apocalypse, iv. 2.
Apostles, their mission, elc. xii. 439. Gift
or the Holy Ghost, 497. Successors,
Charity, its praises, elc. xii. 576—587. Charlemagne, i. 586. Charybdis, ii. 1020. Chemic, iii. 609. Chersonese, xi. 392. Cherubim, (vide Angels.) Chrysolite, iii. 596. Clang, vii. 422 ; xi. 835. Cleombrotus, iii. 473. Colure, ix. 66.
Conglobed, vii. 239.
Conjugal love, elc. iv. 750, 765. Consists in reason, viii. 586. Defined, 589; xii. 615; ix. 357.
Conjugal obedience, etc. iv. 635. Conjugal union, viii. 494; ix. 955. Conscience, iii. 194; iv. 23; x. 842; xii. 515, 529.
Constellations, their appearances, motion, etc. iii. 577. Contraction, vi. 597. Cowls, iii. 490.
Creation, the universal, described, iii. 708; vii. 221.
Creatures, iv. 340; viii. 369; x. 707; xi. 733.
Crocodile, vii. 474. Crocus, iv. 701. Cronian, x. 290. Cyclades, v. 264. Cycle, viii. 84. Cyrene, ii. 904.
Battle of the Angels, vi. 202-877.
Beelzebub, i. 79, 128, 272; ii. 299, 310,
Dagon, i. 457. Damasked, iv. 334. Dam, ix. 612. Damiata, ii. 593. Damned, ii. 596. Damp, xi. 544. Danaw, i. 353.
Daphne, iv. 273.
David, his throne why eternal, xii. 320. Day and night in heaven, vi. 4.
Death and sin, ii. 648; x. 249, 282, 326,
410, 585, 610, (vide Similes.)
Death described, ii. 666, 688, 727, 777; x. 264, 596, (vide Similes.)
Death, natural, xi. 466—493, 469; xii. 425 —434, 571.
Death, eternal, x. 808.1
Deluge, universal, (vide Noah.)
Demogorgon, ii. 965.
Descant, iv. 603.
Despair, iv. 108.
Devils, why excluded from grace, ii. 129.
Discord, ii. 496, etc.; x. 707.
Dipsas, x. 526.
Dominion, xii. 64.
Dreams, etc. iv. 799 ; v. 110; xii. 611.
Eagle, xi. 185. Earth, its general creation described, iii. 715; vii. 231; V. 574; vii. 276, 313; II. 99. The centre or the creaiion, 107. Destruction by Noah's flood described, xi. 743. Restitution after it, lii. 852, An universal Paradise at the Messiah's coming to judgment, 463, (iid« World.) Eden, the country bounded, iv. 210, (tide Paradise.)
Egypt, the plagues ot it described, xin.
Elements, etc. subsist on each other, xi.
Eve and Adam, {vide Abam and Eve. In- Nocence. Similes.)
Eve particularly described, characterised, etc. iv. 712; V. 379; viii. 470, 596; ix. 386—896; iv. 440, 419, 635; V. 27, 129, 443. Her formation, viii. 460, 500; ix. 205 to the end. The sentence pro- nounced on her, x. 102. Behaviour and speech to Adam's repulse of her, 909, 937, 966; xi. 162, 268; xii. 610, (vidé ADAM. SIMILES.)
Evening described, iv. 598.
Evil, in thought unapproved--blameless,
Experience a guide to wisdom, ix. 807.
Faith in Christ, xii. 420, 515, 529. Fame (or glory), xi. 688.
Fancy, its office, v. 100. The eye «f the soul, viii. 460.
Fate, the will of God, vii. 170. Fig-tree, of which Adam, Eve, etc. made aprons, described, ix. lioi. Firmament described, vii. 261. Fish described, 391.
Flaming sword in Paradise on Adam's, etc. expulsion thence, xii. 632, {vidé SIMILES.)
Flood universal, (vide Nokn.) Freedom, xi. 797.
Free-will asserted, iii. 95; v. 235, 520; viii.
635; ix. 350; x. 43. Reason, the same, iii. 108: ix. 350. The image of God, viii.
440. Fruition, carnal, the passion ot it cen- sured, viii. 579.
Gabriel, IV. 443, 561, 576, 782, 866, 877, 902, 1006; vi. 45, 354. God the Father, contemplaling his works, etc. iii. 56. Speeches to, and replies from the Son, on Satan's design on the creaiion, 80—274. Decrees his resur- rection, 303. His (the Father's) attri- butes, etc. 372. Visibly seen in the Son, 383; vi. 680. Charge to Raphael to warn Adam against his fall, v. 224. Speech to the celestial hierarchy, 600. To the Son on Satan's, etc. revolt there- on, 719. Army against the revolters described, vi. 15. Speech to Abdiel, 29. Appoints Michael and Gabriel chiefs of the celestial army, 44. Appoints God the Son to end it, 680. Resolving the creation ot the world, vii. 139. Com- mits the work to him, 163. Described, 594. Speech (the Father's) on the guar-
dian angels' return from Paradise, x. 34, 55. Speech to the celestials on Sin and Death's entrance into the world thereby, 614. Charge to the angels, touching the changes in the creation on the fall, 649. Answer to the Son's in- tercession on Adam's repentance, xi. 45. Speech to the celestials, convened at his decreeing his expulsion from Pa- radise, 84; to Michael thereon, 99.
God the Son, at the right hand of the Father, iii. 62. Answer to bim on Sa- tan's design, iii. 144. On his proposing the manner, etc. of man's redemption, 227; undertakes it, 236. Love to man, and filial obedience, 266. His resur- rection, as God and man, decreed, iii. 303. His attributes, 383. Answer lo the Father on Satan's, etc. revolt, vi. 733. The image of the Father, iii. 38*; vi. 680, 736. The Messiah, 718, 881. Answer lo the Father, appointing him lo end the battle, 723, 730—877. His person, equipage, etc. in Ibe work of the creaiion described, vii. 192. Re- ascent to heaven after it, 550. Institu- tion of the Sabbath, 581. Appointed by the Father judge of Adam's trans- gression, x. 55. Sentence pronounced by him on the serpent, 163. Clolhes them wilh skins, etc. 211. The justice of his sentence, 754. His intercession on their repentance, xi. 22, (vide Mes- Siah.) God, purity of adoration more acceptable to him than ritual, iv. 736. All good proceeds from, and returns lo bim, v. 469. To be contemplated in the works of the creation, 508. Acts immediate, vii. 176. The centre of heaven, ix. 107. His absolute decrees, xi. 311. Omni- presence, goodness, etc. 335. The Tear of him, etc., wilh loss of freedom, de- generates, 797. Particular presence, xii. 48. To obey, love, depend on hi* providence, etc., the sum of knowledge, 557: and wisdom, 575.
Gospel, how lo be understood, xii. 511. Grace of God, iii. 129, 198; xi. 22; xii.
Heaven and earth, their final renovation by lire, xi. 898; xii. 517. After-hap- piness therein, 463, 549.
Heaven, the joys, etc. of it described, iii. 344; its gate, 501; v. 253. Passage from thence to the world, iii. 526; its general creation, 716.
Hell described, i. 60, 228; ii. 58T, 618; III gates, 645; first opened by sin, 871, (vide Similes.)
Hierarchies of heaven, v. 579. Hinnom, the valley of, i. 399. Holy Ghost, its effusion, etc. at Ihe crea- tion, vii. 195. Descent, etc. on the apostles, and all baptized, xii. 485. Promised and given alike lo all beliey- ers, xii. 518.
Hymn to light, iii. I. To God the Father and Son, 372. On conjugal love, iv. 750. On the creaiion, vii. 180, 252, 557, 602.
Hypocrisy, iii. 682. Hypocrites, iv. 131, 744,
Idolatry, the origin of it, i. 364; of the post-diluvian world, xii. 115. Inimortality of the soul discussed, x. 782. Innocence, the state of it described, iv. 312, 482, 738; v. 211, 303, 443; viii. 40,
Invocations, the author's, i. 6; iii. 51; vii. 1; xi. 20.
Jove, (a fallen angel,) i. 512. Israelites, their bondage and deliverance from Egypt, xii. 163; their civil and sacred economy in the wilderness, 223. Establishment in Canaan, 260. Reason, use, etc. of their ritual laws, 280. Go- vernment by judges and kings, 315. Captivity in Babylon, 335. Return from thence to tbe birth of the Messiah, etc. 345—359.
Isis, (a fallen angel,) i. 478. llhuriel, iv. 788, 810.
Knowledge of good and evil, the tree of it, iv. 220; ix. 626; ii. 575; vii. 542; viii. 343 ix. 679, 795, 863.
Knowledge (or opinion), v. 100; vii. 126; viii. 188; xii. 560; viii. 192, {vide Si- Miles.)
Lethe, ii. 582. Leviathan, i. 201.
Liberty, with the loss of it, virtue, etc. degenerates, xi. 797.
Life, the tree of, iv. 218; ix. 69.
Light, hymn to it, iii. I. The first day's creation, vii. 213.
Limbo, or fool's Paradise, iii. 495. Lion, xi. 187.
Love, conjugal, its praises, iv. 750; viii. 586, 589, 620; ix. 239, 241. Lucifer, x. 425. (Vide Satan.) Lust, ix. 1011.
Mammon, i. 678; ii. 229; Man, fallen, iii. 130, 198, 203, 227, 290.
Han, why created, iii. 677; ix. 143. His creation, vii. 524. Dominion, 520. Love to woman, viii. 567. His superiority
over the woman, x. 145, 195.
Medusa, ii. 610.
Mercy, iii. 132.
Messiah, x. 181, 182; xii. 359, 376, 386, 388, 420, 451, 458, 543.
Michael (the Archangel), vi. 44, 250, 262, 296, 320, 410. Prepares to expel Adam, etc. from Paradise, xi. 126, 238, 251, 286, 334. Discovers to Adam (in vision) wbat should happen to the time of the flood, 423—867. Discovers to him (re- latively) what should happen from the flood to the general resurrection, xii. 6—551. His answer to Adam's resolu- tion of future obedience, etc. 575. Leads him and Eve out, 637. (Vide Si- MILES.)
Moloch, i. 392; ii. 51; vi. S57, 360. Moon, supposed inhabited, iii. 459. Its office, 726. Rising, iv. 006. The spots
Pandemonium, i. 710. (Vide Similes.) Paradise (or the garden of Eden) describ- ed, iv. 131, 214; v. 291; vii. 537; viii. 304; ix. 439. The eastern gale of it, iv. 542. Guarded by Gabriel, 549. The bower of Adam and Eve there, iv. 690. The watches, etc. of the guardian an- gels, iv. 778, 782, 861, 977. The hill there, xi. 377. Adam and Eve's expul- sion, xii. 625. The Darning sword, etc. 632. The sett of it destroyed by Noah's flood, xi. 829. (Vide Similes.) Patriarchal government, xii. 13. Patriarchs, xii. 113. Peace, xi. 783.
Peor or Chemos, i. 412. Persecution, xii. 508—533. Phlegelhou, ii. 580. Plagues of Egypt, xii. 173. Planets, x. 656. Poles, x. 668, 680.
Prayer, xi. 5, 14, 146, 311.
Predestination defined, iii. 114.
Priests occasion the iirst dissension in the Jewish church and slaie, xii. 353. Prosopopœia, ix. 782, 1000.
Rainbow, xi. 865, 895. Ramiel, vi. 369.
Raphael (the Archangel), his descent to Paradise to warn Adam against bis fall, v. 247. Described, 276. Answer to Adam's invitation to his bower, and entertainment there, 371-450. Dis- course with Adam on various subjects, v. 468—viii. 651. (Vide Similes.1 Reason, iv. 95, 108; v. 100, 486; viii. 369; iX. 850, 486, 653; Xii. 83, 97.
Sabbath, rii. 581, 594. Salvation, xii. 449.
Satanthe prince of the fallen angels), his fall from heaven, i. 34. Why so called, i. 81; v. 657. Speech to Becl- xebub, after their fall, i. 84. Reply to Beelzebub's answer, 157. Ascent from hell, 292. His stature, looks, etc. 193; iv. 985; v. 706. Speech to Beelzebub thereon, i. 242. His shield, 284. His ■pear, 292. Speech to the other fallen angels, 315. His standard, 531. Speech to the fallen angels reimbattled, 622. Calls a council, 752. Speech to them in council, ii. II. Undertakes an attempt on the world, (the result of it,) 430, 465. Ascent to the gates of bell, 629. Speech to Death there, 681. The father of Sin and Death, 727. Answer to Sin's speech, 737. To her reply, 817. Flight into Chaos, 917. Arrival at the court of Chaos, 951. Speech there, 968. Brought Sin and Death first into the world, 1024. Ascent to light, etc. 1034. Alights on the convex of the world's outermost orb, iii. 4is. View of the world from the first step to heaven gate, 550. Des- cent to it described, 561. Stops at the sun, 588. Discovers Uriel, the angel of it, there, 621. Transforms himself to a cherub, 634. Speech to Uriel, 654. Deceives him, 681. Is directed by him to the world, 724; and Paradise, 733. Alights on Mount Niphates, 739. Soli- loquy, contemplating the sun, 432. The first hypocrite, 121. Arrives at Para- dise. 131. Sits on the tree of life, 194. Soliloquy on view of Adam and Eve in Paradise, 358. Descends from the tree of life, and assumes several animal shapes, 395. Listens to Adam's dis- course with Eve, on God's prohibition of the tree of knowledge, 408. Soli- loquy on the subject of it, 505. Re- solves thence to tempt them to dis- obedience, 512. First attempt, in the assumed shape of a load, on Eve asleep, 799. Answer to Ithuriel and Zephon, reprehending him thereon, 827. Re- ply to their answer, 854. Answer to iabriel, 886. Reply to his answer, 925. To another, 968. The inauguration of God the Son, the occasion of his revolt, T. 657. Speech to the next subordinate angel of his party thereon, 673. seat of his hierarchy before his fall, 756. Speech to the angels of his hierarchy thereon, 772. Reply to Abdiel's answer, on his speech to the hierarchs of his party, 853. His army, vi. 79. His port and post there, 99. Answer to Abdiel's reply, 150. Battle between his and the celestial army, 205—385. Hi3 prowess in the battle, 246. Encounters Michael, 253. Answer to Michael's speech there- on, 281. The combat described, 296. Wounded by him, 320. Carried off, 335. His army defeated, 386. Retreats, and
calls a council, 414. Speech in council, 418. Reply to Nisroch there, 469. Gives the word for renewing the battle, 458. Renewed by his army, and the second battle described, 569, 670. Speech on the celestial army's retreat, 608. Fis army's entire defeat and expulsion f*om heaven described, 831—877. Returns from compassing the earth to Paradise by night, in a mist, in order to his temptation, ix. 53. His circuit, etc. described, 62. Soliloquy thereon, 99. Enters the serpent, 182. View (in that shape) of Eve, 424. Soliloquy there- on, 473. Behaviour to her, 523. Speech to her, 532. Reply to her answer, 567. The discourse (his temptation of Eve 10 eat the forbidden fruit) continued, 732. Leaves her after eating it, 784. His sen- tence thereon (virtually) pronouncrd by God the Son, x. 171. Returns to bell to avoid bis presence In Paradise, 33T. Meets Sin and Death upon their journey to the world, on Adam's, etc. fall, 345. Answer to Sin's speech, 383. Parts with them, 4io. Ascends his throne at Pan- demonium, 443. Speech to the falleu angels assembled there, 459. Applaud- ed with a hiss, 504. He and they trans- formed to serpents, 510. Farther pu- nished with an illusion of the forbidden fruit, 549. Both annually continued, 575. Himself (the serpent) dragged in chains at the ascension of the Messiah, xii. 453. Dissolution (with the world) at his coming to judgment, 545. (Vid* Similes.)
Seasons, their changes, x. 677. Serpent described, ix. 182, 495; I. 183, 175. (Vide Similes.) Sidereal blasts, etc. x. 692.
Adah and Eve, after their fall—to the Americans, ix. 1115. Their repentance —to Deucalion and Pyrrha's flood, xi. 8. Adam caressing Eve-to Jupiter with Juno, iv. 499. His address to her sleep- ing—to Zephyrus breathing on Flora, v. 15. Bower—to Pomona's arbour, 377. Desires to know the story of the crea- tion, prior to his own—to thirst unal- layed, increasing, 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, xi.
Angels, celestial, the spears of—to ears of corn, iv. 980. Their march—to that of the birds, vi. 72. Their hallelujahs—to the sound of seas, x. 642. Their faces —to a double Janus (four), xi. 12s. Their eyes—to those of Argus, 129. Their appearance—to the angels appear- ing to Jacob, 213; to those in Dothan, 216. Their motion—to an evening mist, xii. 628.
Angels, fallen for infernal)—to autumnal leaves, i. 302. To floating sea-sedge after a storm, 304. Rousing at Satan s command—to sentinels waking from sleep, 331. Imbatlling—to the Egyp- tian plague of locusts, 338. To the ir- ruptions of the northern barbarian!, 351.
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