Similies, Adam and Eve, after their fall to the Americans, as first fech
by Columbus, ix. 1115. Their repentance-to Deucalion and
Pyrrha's address to restore the haman race after their food, xi. 8. Adam careling Evento Jupiter with Juno, (May-Mowers,) iv.
499. His address to her feeping- to Zephyrus breathing on Flora, v. 15. Bower---to Pomona's arbour, v. 377. De fires to know the lory of the creation, prior to his own to thirft unallayed, increasing, vii. 60. A waked after carnal ftui- tion, the first effe&t of his fall- to Samson shorn by Dalilah,
Scrrow on the vision of Noah's Picoll - to a fa- ther's mourning his children all destroyed in his view at once, Angels (celestial) the spears (of the guardiıns of Paradise) ears of corn ripe for reaping, iv. 980. 'Their march againfi Sa-
--- to that of the birds in Paradise to receive their names from Adam, vi. 72. Their hallelujuhs- to the found of seas, x. 642. Appointed to expel Adam, &c. from Para- difentheir faces to a donble Janos, (four,) xi. 128. Their eyes- to those of Argus, ix. 129. Their appearance there- to the angels appearing to Jacob in Mahanaim, xi. 213.- To those in Dothan against the King of Affyria, xi. 216. Their
motion to an evening. min, . 028. Angels (fallen or infernal), to autumnal leaves, i. 302.-To
Routing sea-fedge after a storm, i. 304. Roufing at Satan's com- mand to centinels waking from seep on duty, i. 331. Im- battling against the ángels celestial to the Egyptian plague of locusts, i. 338. - To the irruptions of the northern bar. barians, i: 351. Their disposition to engage into that of the heroes, of antiquity, i. 549. With them the greatest armies in all ages since the creation--pigmies, i. 573. Thenitelves
fight before the Rols-and the Persian from the Turk walling the intermediate country, x: 431, Transformation to ferpegis-to those fprung from the Gorgon's blood, &c. X. 520.- Their appearance on the tree illusive of the forbidden fruit to the Inaky hair of Megara, (one of the furies, i X.
558. The fruit- to the apples of Sodom, *.561. Chaos, atoms, their motion- to the Lihyan, quicksands, if. 200. Confusion there-to fforming a town, ii. 930.-
-To beaven and earth (supposed) falling, &c. ii. 924. Beath, and þin, theis making a bridge over Chaos to the world
to polar winds, driving ice together in the (fuppofed) north-east passage, x. 289. The work--to Neptune's fixing the isle of Delos, 293.- To Xerxes making a bridge over
the Hellespont, X. 306. Death's instinct of Adam's fall- to the flight of birds of prey
to a field of battle, x, 273. His and Satan's frowns on each
other to two thunder-clouds meeting, ii. 214. Eye her hair to the yine's tendrils, iv. 305. Her looks
to the first blush of morning, v. 122. Herself-a-to Pan- dora, iv, 713, Toa wood-nymph, or Venus, y: 379:
-To a Dryad, or Delia, (Diana,) ix. 387.-To Pales or Pomona,
---To Ceres, ix. 395. Her texnptation by Satan alluded to by the story of Ophion and Eurynome, ix. 578.. Flaming sworsi in Paradise, on Adam and Eve's expulsion tħience
to a comet, xii. 632. Its heat, &c.- to the Libyan air,
- to mount Etna, (in Sicily,) i. 130.- To the bog os lake Serbonis, (in Palestine,) ii. 592. Knowledge, the defire of it to a thirst unallayed, iecreasing,
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To the longest train of a comet, ii. goy.To the mount Teneriff, or Atlas, iv. 985. His Thield- to the moon, i. 284. His spear-to a mast, i. 292. His standard to a meteor, i.
. 337. The phænomenon of his afcent to hell-gates-to a fleet in the offing, ii. 636. His, and Death's frowns on each other
to two thunder-clouds meeting, i. 714. Flight to the court of Chaosato a gryphon's in the wilderness, ii
. 943. To- wards leaven- to the thip) Argo through the Thracian Bor- phorus, i. 1016.To Ulysses's voyage between Scylla and Cha- rybdis, ii. 1019. Arrival at light, &c.- to a weather-beaten veffel towards port, ü. 1043.- On the convex of the world's uttermoft orbato à vulture seeking his prey, iii. 431. First view of the world to a scout's casual prospect, after a danger- ous journey, of a new country or city, iii. 543. - -Of the lars orbs to the Hesperian gardens, &c. iii. 568. Appearance in the sun's orb- to a spot in it differing from all altronomi- cal observations, iii. 688. Meditation on his intended attempt on the world to a gun recoiling, iv. 14. In Paradise
a wolf preying on a feld, iv. 183.- -- To a thief breaking in at a houfe-cop, &c. iv. 188.To a tyger in view of a brace of fawns, iv. 403. Detected by Ithuriel there-
to gun-pow. der taking fire, iv. 814. Reprehended by Zephon- to a fteed 'seined, in a fret, iv. 857. His army against the celestials in number to the dars, v. 745. -To the dew-drops, v. 746. Theis applause of his reply to Abdiel- to the sound of deep waters, vi, 872. Himself recoiling on a blow received from Michach-to a mountain finking by an earthquake, vi. 193. His combat with Michaela to two planets (the frame of nature fupposed disolved) rushing in opposition to each other, vi. 310. View (in the serpént) of Paradise and Eve there to a citi- zen's taking the air in the country from his home' confinement, ix. 445. Shape (transformed to a serpent) on his return to helf after the temptation to the serpent Python, x. 519. His tempting Eve-alladed to by the story of Ophion and Euryo
nome, X. 578. Serpent, that entered by Satanto those Hermione and Cadmus
were transformed to, ix. $04.- To that affumed by Æfcula- pius, ix. 500.- -To those by Jupiter Ammon, and Capitoli. nus, ix. 508. His motion, wreathings, &c.- to the working of a ship in lifting winds, &c. ix. 513: His creft (preceding Eve to the forbidden tree) to an exhalation Haming, (Wili j'th' Wifp) ix. 034. His addrefs introducing the temptatios
to that of an orator of the Athenian or Roman common. wealths, ix. 670. Sin, her middle parts- to the supposed dogs of Scylla, ji. 659.
of the night-hag, ii. 662. Spears to ears of corn ripe for reaping, iv. 980. Stars, their orbs to the Hefperian gardens, &c. iii. 568. suo, his course turned at Adai:'s, &c. eating the forbidden fruit was at the banquet of 'Thyctes, *. 688.
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Uric, his lessent from the sun on Paradietto a hooting star, Waters, their Aux into feas, &c. on the creation- to drops on
dult, vii. 200. -To armics forming themselves on found of trumpet, vii. 294 Sin and Death. See Death and Sin. Sin described, ü. 650. Her speech to Satan, and Death, at hell.
gates, ii, 727. Reply to Satan, ii. 747. Her birth, ii. 752. Res ply to his answer, ii. 850. Opens hell-gates to him, i. 871. Speech to Death on Adam's fall, X. 235, To Satan, (meeting him returning to hell,) on her and Death's journey to the world after it, X. 354. To Death on their arrival at Paradise, X. 591.
Reply to Death's answer, x. 602. See Similies. Sin original, luft carnal the forft effect of it, ix, 1911. Its folace, Slavery, original of it the inordinacy of the passions, xii. 86. The
justice of it, as consequential on deviating from virtae, &c. xii. 97. Soul, its faculties, v. 100. Its immortality diicussed, x. 732, Spirits, their effence and power, i. 423-789 Their invisible exist-
ence on carth, iv. 677. . The elect, their hymn to God the Fa. ther, and Son, iii. 372. Materiál, &c. faculties in fpiries, V, 404. 423. Vital, animal, and intellectual spirits progressive from ma- terial nutrition, v. 482. Their existence in life, intellect, shape,
&c. defined, vi. 344. Spring perpetual within the tropics, but for Adam's fall, x. 678. Stars, their places, appearances, &c. t. 5os: Fed by the air, 1
419. Purt of the fourth day's creation, vii. 357. Receive their light from the sun, vii
. 304 See Similies.. Scars, and moon, their courses, influences, &c. iv. 661. Storms, &c. an effect of Adam's fall, xj. 595. Styx, a river of hell, äi. 577. sun, its appearance, place, and power, iii. 571. Brightaess descri- bed, iii. 591.
" Orb fed by exhalations from the groffer, v. 423. Part of the fourth day's creation, vii. 354. The fountain of light, vii. 364. Setting described, iv: 352. 539.590. viii. 830 . 22. Its annual course, producing intense heat and cold, an effet of Adam's fall, x osi. Its oblique motion from the equinoctial, from the fame cause. 4. 671. See Similies.
T. Teachers, false, of the Christian religion described, xii. $08. Temperance, the effect of it long life, xi. 530. Thammuz, or Adonis, a fallen angel, i. 446. Thunder, an effect of Adam's fall, x. 666. Time, respecting eternity, defined, v; $80. Titan, a fallen angel, i. 510. Tradition censured, xil: 511. Tree of life. See Life. Of knowledge. See Knowledge. Truth, suffering for it, fortitude, &c. xii. 569.! Tyranny, Nimrod's, described and cenfured, xii
. 24. Origin of it,
the
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the inordinacy of the paflions, xii. 86. No excuse of the tyrant
(though just in consequence on the subject,) xii. 95. Tyrants, their plea for conqueft, &c. compared with Satan's firft
attempt on man, iv. 390. Twilight described, iv. 508.
V. Vacnity, God's onnipresence an argument against it, vii. 168. Valour, or heroic virtue, the common notion of it censured, xi. 688. Virtue, &c. with loss of freedom degenerates, xi. 797. Realon and
virtue the same, xii. 28. Union conjugal. See Conjugal union. Uriel (the angel of the fun,) iii. 622. His answer to Satan, iii. 694.
Directs him to the world, iii. 724. And Paradise, iii. 733. De- scends thither himself, and informs Gabriel of Satan's predescent, iv. 555. 561. Encounters Adramelech, (a fallen angel,) wounds,
and puts him to Aight, vi. 363. · Sec Similies. Uzziel, (a guardian angel of Paradise,) iv. 782.
W. War, property the original of it, xi. 638. The corruptions of peace
equal to its wastes, xi. 783. Waters separated from the earth, part of the third day's creation,
vii. 282. See Similies. Wife, her duty in danger, distress, &c. ix. 267. xi. 290. Wind, the tempestuous power of it, an effect of Adam's fall, x,-
664.695. Wisdom, the sum of it, the love, &c. of God, xii. 575. Wolves, (or false teachers,) the apostles fucceffors, described, xii,
507 Woman, conjugal obedience her happiness, &c. iv. 635. Man's loves
towards her, how consistent with his superiority, viii. 567. I'wo of her lovelielt qualities, ix. 232. The effect of leaving her to her own will, ix. 1182. His superiority over her given him by God, *. 145. 195. A novelty, defect of nature, &c. (sarcastically,) s. 888. The advantage of her social over her artificial accomplish- ments, xi. 614. Every way the cause of man's milery, (farcasti-
cally,) xi. 632. Works, with faith in Chrift; eternal-life, xii. 420. World, the convex of its outermoltorb described, iii. 418. By whom
possessed, (sarcastically,) iii. 444. 463. The creation of the world committed by God the Father to God the Son, vii. 103, De- fcribed, vii. 218. Situation of it, respecting heaven and hell, x. 320. See Earth.
Z. Zephon, (a guardian angel of Paradife,) iv. 788. Reprehends Satan's
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