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Milton, John. Milton's Paradise lost, or, the fall of man: with historical, philosophical, critical, and explanatory notes. From the learned Raymond de St. Maur. Wherein the Technical Terms in the Arts and Sciences are explained; the original Signification of the names of Men, Cities, Animals, &c. and from what Language derived, render'd easy and intelligible. Also the mythological fables of the heathens, wherever referr'd to, historically related; difficult passages cleared of their obscurity; and the Whole reduced to the standard English idiom. In twelve books. Embellished with a great number of copper-plates.The Women's Print History Project, 2019, title ID 26456, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/title/26456. Accessed 2026-06-10.

@book{ wphp_26456
  author={Milton,John},
  year={1754},
  title={Milton's Paradise lost, or, the fall of man: with historical, philosophical, critical, and explanatory notes. From the learned Raymond de St. Maur. Wherein the Technical Terms in the Arts and Sciences are explained; the original Signification of the names of Men, Cities, Animals, &c. and from what Language derived, render'd easy and intelligible. Also the mythological fables of the heathens, wherever referr'd to, historically related; difficult passages cleared of their obscurity; and the Whole reduced to the standard English idiom. In twelve books. Embellished with a great number of copper-plates.},
  publisher={Mary Cooper [The Globe] \& William Reeve \& Charles Sympson [Simpson]},
  address={London},    }

Suggestions and Comments for Milton's Paradise lost, or, the fall of man: with historical, philosophical, critical, and explanatory notes. From the learned Raymond de St. Maur. Wherein the Technical Terms in the Arts and Sciences are explained; the original Signification of the names of Men, Cities, Animals, &c. and from what Language derived, render'd easy and intelligible. Also the mythological fables of the heathens, wherever referr'd to, historically related; difficult passages cleared of their obscurity; and the Whole reduced to the standard English idiom. In twelve books. Embellished with a great number of copper-plates.
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