Note: I do not know who wrote these notes, but they are not copyrighted, so I used them.
(1) On Santa Maura--olim Deucadia.
(2) Sappho.
(3) This flower is much noticed by Lewenhock and Tournefort. The bee feeding upon its blossom becomes intoxicated.
(4) Clytia--The Crysanthemum Peruvianum, or, to employ a better known term, the turnsol--which turns continually toward the sun, covers itself, like Peru, the country from which it comes, with dewy clouds which cool and refresh its flowers during the most violent heat of the day. -- B. de St. Pierre.
(5) There is cultivated in the king's garden in Paris, a species of serpentine aloes wihtout prickles, whose large and beautiful flowers exhales a strong odor of vanilla, during the time of expansion, which is very short. It does not blow till toward the month of July--you then perceive it gradually open its petals--expand them--fade and die. -- St. Pierre
(6) There is found, in the Rhone, a beautiful lily of the Valisnerian kind. Its stem will stretch to the length of three or four feet, thus preserving its head above water in the swellings of the river.
(7) The Hyacinth.
(8) It is a fiction of the Indians that Cupid was first seen floating in one of these down the river Ganges, and that he loves the cradle of his childhood.
(9) And golden vials full of odors, which are the prayers of the saints. -- Rev. St. John
(10) The Humanitarians held that God was to be understood as having really a human form. -- Vide Clarke's Sermon, vol. I, page 26, fol. edit.
The drift of Milton's argument leads him to employ language which would appear, at first sight, to verge upon their doctrine; but it will be seen immediately that he guards himself against the charge of having adopted one of the most ignorant errors of the dark ages of the church. -- Dr. Sumner's Notes on Milton's Christian Doctrine
This opinion, in spite of many testimonies to the contrary, could never have been very general. Andeus, a Syrian of Mesopotamia, was condemned for the opinion as heretical. He lived in the begining of the fourth century. His disciples were called Anthropmorphites. --Vide Du Pin
Among Milton's minor poems are these lines:
Dicite sacrorum praesides nemorum Deae, and c.
Quis ille primus cujus ex imagine
Natura solers finxit humanum genus?
(11) Eternus, incorruptus, aequaevus polo,
Unusque et universus exemplar Dei.
And afterward:
Non cui profundum Caecitas lumen dedit
Dircaeus augur vidit hunc alto sinu, and c.
Seltsumen Tochter Jovis
Seinem Schosskinde
Der Phantasie.
--Goethe
(12) Sightless--too small to be seen. --Legge
(13) I have often noticed a peculiar movement of the fire-flies; they will collect in a body and fly off, from a common centre, into innumerable radii.
(14) Therasaea, or Therasea, the island mentioned by Seneca, which, in a moment, arose from the sea to the eyes of astonished mariners.
(15) Some star which, from the ruin'd roof,
Of shak'd Olympus, by mischance, did fall.
--Milton
(16) Voltaire, in speaking of Persepolis, says, "Je connois bien l'admiration qu'inspirent ces ruines--mais un palais érigé au pied d'une chaine des rochers sterils--peut il être un chef-d'oeurve des arts?"
(17) "Oh! the wave!"--Ula Deguisi is the Turkish appellation; but, on its own shores, it is called Bahar Loth, or Almotanah. There were undoubtedly more than two cities engulfed in the "dead sea." In the valley of Siddim were five--Adrah, Zeboin, Zoar, Sodom, and Gomorrah. Stephen of Byzantium mentions eight, and Strabo thirteen (engulfed), but the last is out of all reason.
It is said (Tacitus, Strabo, Josephus, Daniel of St. Saba, Nau, Mundrell, Troilo, D'Arvieux), that after an excessive drought, the vestiges of columns, walls, etc., are seen above the surface. At any season, such remains may be discovered by looking down into the transparent lake, and at such distances as would argue the existence of many settlements in the space now usurped by the "Asphaltites."
(18) Eyraco--Chaldea.
(19) I have often thought I could distinctly hear the sound of the darkness as it stole over the horizon.
(20) Fairies use flowers for their charactery. --Merry Wives of Windsor
(21) In Scripture is this passage, "The sun shall not harm thee by day, nor the moon by night." It is perhaps not generally known that the moon, in Egypt, has the effect of producing blindness to those who sleep with the face exposed to its rays, to which circumstance the passage evidently alludes.
(22) The albatross is said to sleep on the wing.
(23) I met with this idea in an old English tale, which I am now unable to obtain, and quote from memory, "The verie essence and, as it were, springe-heade and origins of all musiche is the verie pleasaunte sounde which the trees of the forest do make when they growe."
(24) The wild bee will not sleep in the shade if there be moonlight.
The rhyme in this verse, as in one about sixty lines before, has an appearance of affectation. It is, however, imitated from Sir W. Scott, or rather from Claud Halcro--in whose mouth I admired its effect:
(25) With Arabians there is a medium between Heavena and Hell, where men suffer no punishment, but yet do not attain that tranquil and even happiness which they suppose to be characteristic of heavenly enjoyment.
--Luis Ponce de Leon
--Milton
(28) Shadowing more beauty in their airy brows
Than have the white breasts of the Queen of Love.
--Marlowe
(29) Pennon-for opinion.
--Milton