صور الصفحة
PDF
النشر الإلكتروني

MILTON.

THE Life of Milton has been already written in fo many forms, and with fuch minute enquiry, that I might perhaps more properly have contented myself with the addition of a few notes to Mr. Fenton's elegant Abridgement, but that a new narrative was thought neceffary to the uniformity of this edition.

JOHN MILTON was by birth a gentleman, defcended from the proprietors of Milton near Thame in Oxfordshire, one of whom forfeited his eftate in the times of York and Lancaster. Which fide he took I know not; his defcendant inherited no veneration for the White Rofe.

His grandfather John was keeper of the forest of Shotover, a zealous papist, who difinherited his fon, because he had forfaken the religion of his ancestors.

[blocks in formation]

His father, John, who was the fon difinherited, had recourfe for his fupport to the prefeffion of a scrivener. He was a man

[ocr errors]

eminent for his skill in mufick, many of his compofitions being ftill to be found; and his reputation in his profeffion was such, that he grew rich, and retired to an estate. He had probably more than common literature, as his fon addreffes him in one of his most elaborate Latin poems. He married a gentlewoman of the name of Cafton, a Welsh family, by whom he had two fons, John the poet, and Chriftopher who ftudied the law, and adhered, as the law taught him, to the King's party, for which he was awhile perfecuted; but having, by his brother's intereft, obtained permiffion to live in quiet, he fupported himself fo honourably by chamberpractice, that foon after the acceffion of King James, he was knighted and made a Judge; but, his conftitution being too weak for bu fincf, he retired before any difreputable com"pliances became neceffary.

He had likewife a daughter Anne, whom he married with a confiderable fortune to Edward Philips, who came from Shrewsbury,

and

and rofe in the Crown-office to be fecondary: by him she had two fons, John and Edward, who were educated by the poet, and from whom is derived the only authentick account of his domeftick manners.

[ocr errors]

John, the poet, was born in his father's house, at the Spread-Eagle in Bread-street, Dec. 9, 1608, between fix and seven in the morning. His father appears to have been very folicitous about his education; for he was instructed at first by private tuition under the care of Thomas Young, who was afterwards chaplain to the English merchants at Hamburgh; and of whom we have reason to think well, fince his scholar confidered him as worthy of an epistolary Elegy.

He was then sent to St. Paul's School, under the care of Mr. Gill; and removed, in the beginning of his fixteenth year, to Christ's College in Cambridge, where he entered a fizar, Feb. 12, 1624,

He was at this time eminently skilled in the Latin tongue; and he himself, by annexing the dates to his first compositions, a

boast

boast of which the learned Politian had given: him an example, feems to commend the earlinefs of his own proficiency to the notice of pofterity. But the products of his vernal fertility have been furpaffed by many, and particularly by his contemporary Cowley. Of the powers of the mind it is difficult to form an estimate: many have excelled Milton in their firft effays, who never rofe to works like Paradife Loft.

At fifteen, a date which he ufes till he is fixteen, he tranflated or verfified two Pfalms, 114 and 136, which he thought worthy of the publick eye; but they raise no great expectations: they would in any numerous fehool have obtained praise, but not excited wonder.

Many of his elegies appear to have been written in his eighteenth year, by which it appears that he had then read the Roman authors with very nice difcernment. I once heard Mr. Hampton, the tranflator of Polybius, remark what I think is true, that Milton was the first Englishman who, after the revival of letters, wrote Latin verfes with

claffick

claffick elegance. If any exceptions can be made, they are very few: Haddon and Afchram, the pride of Elizabeth's reign, however they may have succeeded in profe, no fooner attempt verses than they provoke derifion. If we produced any thing worthy of notice before the elegies of Milton, it was perhaps Alabafter's Roxana.

Of these exercises which the rules of the University required, fome were published by him in his maturer years. They had been undoubtedly applauded; for they were fuch as few can perform: yet there is reason to fufpect that he was regarded in his college with no great fondness. That he obtained no fellowship is certain; but the unkindness with which he was treated was not merely negative. I am afhamed to relate what I fear

is

true, that Milton was one of the last students in either university that suffered the publick indignity of corporal correction.

It was, in the violence of controverfial hoftility, objected to him, that he was exe pelled this he fteadily denies, and it was apparently not true; but it seems plain from

« السابقةمتابعة »