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As you imagine; she has a hidden strength,

Which you remember not.

Sec. Br.
What hidden strength,
Unless the strength of Heaven, if you mean that?

El. Br. I mean that too, but yet a hidden strength,
Which, if Heaven gave it, may be term'd her own:
'Tis Chastity, my brother, Chastity:

She, that has that, is clad in complete steel;
And, like a quiver'd nymph with arrows keen,
May trace huge forests, and unharbour'd heaths,
Infamous hills', and sandy perilous wilds,
Where, through the sacred rays of Chastity,
No savage fierce, bandite, or mountaineer",
Will dare to soil her virgin purity:
Yea, there, where very desolation dwells,

By grots and caverns shagg'd with horrid shades,
She may pass on with unblench'd' majesty,
Be it not done in pride, or in presumption.
Some say, no evil thing that walks by night
In fog or fire, by lake or moorish fen *,

d And, like a quiver'd nymph with arrows keen.

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I make no doubt but Milton in this passage had his eye upon Spenser's Belphabe, whose character, arms, and manner of life perfectly correspond with this description.-THYER. e May trace huge forests, &c.

Shakspeare's Oberon, as Mr. Bowle observes, would breed his child-knight to "trace the forests wild," "Midsummer Night's Dream," a. ii. s. 3. In Jonson's" Masques," a fairy says, vol. v. 206 :

Only we are free to trace

All his grounds, as he to chase.-T. WARTON.

Infamous hills.

Horace, "Od." i. iii. 20 :-" Infames scopulos," as Dr. Newton observes. P. Fletcher, in his "Pisc. Ecl." published in 1633, has “infamous woods and downs."-TODD.

Where, through the sacred rays of Chastity, &c.

See Fletcher," Faithful Shepherdess," a. i. s. 1.—T. WARTON.

h Mountaineer.

A mountaineer seems to have conveyed the idea of something very savage and ferocious. In the Tempest," a. iii. s. 3 :

Who would believe that there were mountaineers
Dewlapp'd like bulls?

In "Cymbeline," a. iv. s. 2:

Who call'd me traitor, mountaineer.-T. WARTON.
i Unblench'd.

Unblinded, unconfounded.-WARTON.

1 Some say, no evil thing that walks by night.

Milton had Shakspeare in his head, "Hamlet," a. i. s. 1:—

Some say, that ever 'gainst that season comes
Wherein our Saviour's birth is celebrated-
But then, they say, no spirit walks abroad.

Another superstition is ushered in with the same form in "Paradise Lost," b. x. 575. And the same form occurs in the description of the physical effects of Adam's fall, b. x. 668.-T. WARTON.

In fog or fire, by lake or moorish fen, &c.

Milton here had his eye on the "Faithful Shepherdess," a. i. He has borrowed the sentiment, but raised and improved the diction:

Blue meagre hag, or stubborn unlaid ghost
That breaks his magick chains at curfeu time',
No goblin, or swart faery of the mineTM,

I have heard (my mother told it me,

And now I do believe it) if I keep

My virgin flower uncropt, pure, chaste, and fair,
No goblin, wood-god, fairy, elfe, or fiend,

Satyr, or other power that haunts the groves,

Shall hurt my body, or by vain illusion

Draw me to wander after idle fires;

Or voices calling me, &c.-NEWTON,

1 Stubborn unlaid ghost

That breaks his magick chains at curfeu time.

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An unlaid ghost was among the most vexatious plagues of the world of spirits. It is one of the evils deprecated at Fidele's grave, in “Cymbeline," a. iv. s. 2:

:

No exorciser harm thee,

Nor no witchcraft charm thee,

Ghost unlaid forbear thee!-T. WARTON.

That Milton looked with learned eyes on the superstitious beliefs which he wrought into his verse, these lines bear proof, but his learning adorned rather than oppressed popular fiction the horned and hoofed fiend of Gothic belief became in his hands a sort of infernal Apollo: the witch who drained cows dry, shook ripe corn, and sunk venturous boats, grew with him "a blue meagre hag," a description which inspired the pencil of Fuseli. The "midnight hags" of British belief suffered a sore change in their persons during the course of time. When we first hear of them, instead of all being "beldames auld and droll," they counted in their ranks much youth and beauty; music and dancing made a part of their entertainments; nor did they hesitate to mount their ragweed nags; and, picking up some handsome and wandering youth by the way, carry him with them; and initiating him into the mysteries of love and wine, set him down on Mount Caucasus, and let him find his way back to Plinlimmon or Shehallion as he best could. The witches of latter days were all old, withered, unlovely, and repulsive; their pranks, too, were of a low order, 1 and their spells casily averted. A wand of mountain-ash protected a whole herd of cows; a neck-band of the red berries of the same tree was a full security to the wearer; nay, devout and skilful people retaliated upon them, and made them suffer greater miseries than they were able to inflict.-C.

m Swart faery of the mine.

In the Gothic system of pneumatology, mines were supposed to be inhabited by various sorts of spirits. See Olaus Magnus's chapter "De Metallicis Dæmonibus, Hist. Gent Septentrional." In an old translation of Lavaterus " De Spectris et Lemuribus," is the fol lowing passage:-" Pioners or diggers for metall do affirme, that in many mines there appeare straunge shapes and spirites, who are apparelled like vnto the laborers in the pit. These wander vp and downe in caues and underminings, and seeme to besturre themselves in all kinde of labor; as, to digge after the veine, to carrie together the oare, to put into basketts, and to turn the winding wheele to draw it vp, when in very deed they do nothinge lesse," &c.-" Of Ghostes and Spirites walking by night," &c. Lond. 1572. ch. xvi. p. 73. And hence we see why Milton gives this species of fairy a swarthy or dark complexion.-T. WARTON. The true British goblin, called elsewhere by Milton the "lubbar fiend," and by the Scotch poets the "billie-blin" or "brownie," is a sort of drudging domestic fiend, slightly inclined to work mischief on sluttish housemaids and lazy hinds, but not at all disposed to injure virgins, or harm the good and the industrious. Indeed the main business of the brownie seems to have been to watch over the flocks, the crops, and the fortunes of the house to which he was attached. He has been known to reap a twenty-acre field of corn between twilight and dawn, as much for the purpose of astonishing the reapers, as to prevent it from being shaken by the wind. Milton himself ascribes to him the power thrashing as much grain at a time as ten day-labourers could do; and tradition says, that on one occasion, when a drowsy domestic was unwilling to ride and bring the midwife for the mistress of the mansion, brownie mounted the saddled horse, brought the dame with supernatural haste, and finished his excursion by flogging the lazy menial with the ironbitted bridle till he cried for mercy. The elfin page of Scott is a more elegant sort of

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Fear'd her stern frown, and she was queen of the woods.
What was that snaky-headed Gorgon shield,

That wise Minerva wore, unconquer'd virgin,

Wherewith she freezed her foes to congeal'd stone,
But rigid looks of chaste austerity,

And noble grace that dash'd brute violence
With sudden adoration and blank awe?
So dear to Heaven is saintly chastity,
That, when a soul is found sincerely so,
A thousand liveried angels lacky her',
Driving far off each thing of sin and guilt;
And in clear dream and solemn vision,

Tell her of things that no gross ear can hear;

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brownie; but tradition always represents the latter as a solitary creature, that shuns the sight of man, and of whom only one glimpse in twenty years could be obtained by the most watchful and wary. He accepted only the choicest food, such as cream and honey; his stature was about half the human height; his complexion was brown; his arms long, and his strength immense. He seems to have been utterly naked, and it is known that he had no partiality to clothes; for when the brownie of Lethan-hall was presented with a new mantle and hood, he was heard wailing like a child for three nights; after which he departed, and returned no more.-C.

n Hence, &c.

Milton, I fancy, took the hint of this beautiful mythological interpretation from a dialogue of Lucian, betwixt Venus and Cupid; where the mother asking her son how, after having attacked all the other deities, he came to spare Minerva and Diana, Cupid replies, that the former looked so fiercely at him, and frightened him so with the Gorgon head which she wore upon her breast, that he durst not meddle with her; and that as to Diana, she was always so employed in hunting, that he could not catch her.—THYER.

The frivolous bolt of Cupid.

This reminds one of "the dribbling dart of love," in "Measure for Measure." "Bolt," I believe, is properly the arrow of a crossbow.-T. WARTON.

See Shakspeare, "Mids. Night's Dream," a. ii. s. 2 :—

Yet mark'd I where the bolt of Cupid fell.-TODD.

P But rigid looks, &c.

"Rigid looks" refer to the snaky locks, and "noble grace" to the beautiful face as Gorgon is represented on ancient gems.-WARBURTON.

9 Brute violence.

See "Par. Reg." b. i. 218.-THYER.

A thousand liveried angels lacky her.

The idea, without the lowness of allusion and expression, is repeated in "Par. Lost," b. viii. 559

About her as a guard angelick placed.-T. WARTON.

s Tell her of things that no gross ear can hear.

See "Arcades," v. 72.

This dialogue between the two Brothers is an amicable contest between fact and philosophy: the younger draws his arguments from common apprehension,

Till oft converse with heavenly habitants
Begin to cast a beam on the outward shape,
The unpolluted temple of the mind',

And turns it by degrees to the soul's essence",
Till all be made immortal: but when lust,

By unchaste looks, loose gestures, and foul talk,
But most by lewd and lavish act of sin,
Lets in defilement to the inward parts;

The soul grows clotted by contagion ",

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and the obvious appearance of things: the elder proceeds on a profounder knowledge, and argues from abstracted principles. Here the difference of their ages is properly made sub. servient to a contrast of character: but this slight variety must have been insufficient to keep so prolix and learned a disputation alive upon the stage: it must have languished, however adorned with the fairest flowers of eloquence. The whole dialogue, which indeed is little more than a solitary declamation in blank verse, much resembles the manner of our author's Latin Prolusions, where philosophy is enforced by pagan fable and poetical allusion.-T. WARTON.

The unpolluted temple of the mind.

For this beautiful metaphor he was probably indebted to St. John, ii. 21. "He spake of the temple of his body:" and Shakspeare has the same, "Tempest," a. i. s. 6 :— There's nothing ill can dwell in such a temple.-NEWTON.

And turns it by degrees to the soul's essence.

This is agrecable to the system of the materialists, of which Milton was one.-WA

BURTON.

The same notion of body's working up to spirit Milton afterwards introduced into his "Par. Lost," b. v. 469, &c. which is there, I think, liable to some objection, as he was entirely at liberty to have chosen a more rational system, and as it is also put into the mouth of an archangel: but in this place it falls in so well with the poet's design, gives such a force and strength to this encomium on chastity, and carries in it such a dignity of sentiment; that, however repugnant it may be to our philosophical ideas, it cannot miss striking and delighting every virtuous and intelligent reader.-THYER.

By unchaste looks, &c.

Divorce,"

"He [Christ] censures an unchaste look to be an adultery already committed: another time he passes over actual adultery with less reproof than for an unchaste look,' b. ii. c. 1. Matth. v. 28.-T. WARTON.

w The soul grows clotted by contagion, &c.

I cannot resist the pleasure of translating a passage in Plato's " Phædon," which Milton here evidently copies :-" A soul with such affectious, does it not fly away to something divine and resembling itself? To something divine, immortal, and wise? Whither when it arrives, it becomes happy; being freed from error, ignorance, fear, love, and other human evils. But if it departs from the body polluted and impure, with which it has been long linked in a state of familiarity and friendship, and by whose pleasures and appetites it has been bewitched, so as to think nothing else true, but what is corporeal, and which may be touched, seen, drunk, and used for the gratifications of lust; at the same time, if it has been accustomed to hate, fear, or shun whatever is dark and invisible to the human eye, yet discerned and approved by philosophy;-I ask, if a soul so disposed will go site cere and disencumbered from the body? By no means And will it not be, as I have supposed, infected and involved with corporeal contagion, which an acquaintance and converse with the body, from a perpetual association, has made congenial? So I think. But, my friend, we must pronounce that substance to be ponderous, depressive, and earthy, which such a soul draws with it; and therefore it is burdened by such a clog, and again is dragged off to some visible place, for fear of that which is hidden and unseen; and, as they report, retires to tombs and sepulchres, among which the shadowy phantasms of these brutal souls, being loaded with somewhat visible, have often actually appeared. Probably, O Socrates: and it is equally probable, O Cebes, that these are the souls of wicked, not virtuous men, which are forced to wander amidst burial-places, suffering the punishment of an impious life and they so long are seen hovering about the monuments of the dead,

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Imbodies, and imbrutes, till she quite lose
The divine property of her first being.

Such are those thick and gloomy shadows damp,
Oft seen in charnel vaults and sepulchres
Lingering, and sitting by a new-made grave,
As loth to leave the body that it loved,
And link'd itself by carnal sensuality

To a degenerate and degraded state.

y

Sec. Br. How charming is divine philosophy !
Not harsh and crabbed, as dull fools suppose;
But musical as is Apollo's lute2,

And a perpetual feast of nectar'd sweets,

Where no crude surfeit reigns.

El. Br.

List, list; I hear

Some far-off halloo break the silent air.

Sec. Br. Methought so too; what should it be?
El. Br.

Either some one like us night-founder'd here,
Or else some neighbour woodman, or at worst,
Some roving robber calling to his fellows.

For certain

Sec. Br. Heaven keep my sister. Again, again, and near!
Best draw, and stand upon our guard.

El. Br.

I'll halloo :

If he be friendly, he comes well; if not,
Defence is a good cause, and Heaven be for us.

Enter the Attendant Spirit, habited like a shepherd.
That halloo I should know; what are you? speak;
Come not too near; you fall on iron stakes else.

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till, from the accompaniment of the sensualities of corporeal nature, they are again clothed with a body," &c. Phæd. Opp. Platon. p. 386, edit. Lugdun. 1590, fol. An admirable writer, the late bishop of Worcester, has justly remarked, that "this poetical philosophy nourished the fine spirits of Milton's time, though it corrupted some." It is highly probable, that Henry More, the great Platonist, who was Milton's contemporary at Christ's-college, might have given his mind an early bias to the study of Plato.-T. WARTON.

Imbodies, and imbrutes.

Thus also Satan speaks of the debasement and corruption of its original divine essence, "Par. Lost." b. ix. 165 :- mix'd with bestial slime,

This essence to incarnate and imbrute,

That to the highth of Deity aspired.-T. WARTON,

y How charming is divine philosophy.

This is an immediate reference to the foregoing speech, in which the divine philosophy of Plato concerning the nature and condition of the human soul after death is so largely and so nobly displayed. Much the same sentiments appear in the "Tractate on Education:"-" I shall not detain you longer in the demonstration of what we should not do; but straight conduct you to a hill-side, where I will point ye out the right path of a vertuous and noble education, laborious indeed at the first ascent, but also so smooth, so green, so full of goodly prospect and melodious sounds, that the harp of Orpheus was not more charming," p. 101, ed. 1675. And see "Par. Reg." b. i. 478, &c.-T. WARTON.

2 But musical as is Apollo's lute.

Perhaps from "Love's Labour's Lost, as Mr. Bowle suggests, a. iv. s. 3.

As sweet and musical

As bright Apollo's lute.-T. WARTON.

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