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poet and the man are imperfectly combined. We allow his greatness as a poet, but deny him the poetical temperament which alone could have enabled him to attain it. He is looked upon as a great, good, reverend, austere, not very amiable, and not very sensitive man. The author and the book are thus set at variance, and the attempt to conceive the character as a whole results in confusion and inconsistency. To us, on the contrary, Milton, with all his strength of will and regularity of life, seems as perfect a representative as any of his compeers of the sensitiveness and impulsive passion of the poetical temperament. We appeal to his remarkable dependence upon external prompting for his compositions; to the rapidity of his work under excitement, and his long intervals of unproductiveness; to the heat and fury of his polemics; to the simplicity with which, fortunately for us, he inscribes small particulars of his own life side by side with weightiest utterances on Church and State; to the amazing precipitancy of his marriage and its rupture; to his sudden pliability upon appeal to his generosity; to his romantic self-sacrifice when his country demanded his eyes from him; above all, to his splendid ideals of regenerated human life, such as poets alone either conceive or realize. To overlook all this is to affirm that Milton wrote great poetry without being truly a poet. One more remark may be added, though not required by thinking readers. We must beware of confounding the essential with the accidental Miltonthe pure vital spirit with the casual vesture of the creeds and circumstances of the era in which it became clothed with mortality :

"They are still immortal

Who, through birth's orient portal

And death's dark chasm hurrying to and fro,
Clothe their unceasing flight

In the brief dust and light

Gathered around their chariots as they go.

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New shapes they still may weave,

New gods, new laws, receive."

If we knew for certain which of the many causes that have enlisted noble minds in our age would array Milton's spirit in brief dust and light," supposing it returned to earth in this nineteenth century, we should know which was the noblest of them all, but we should be as far as ever from knowing a final and stereotyped Milton.

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INDEX.

A.

Adam, not the hero of "Paradise

Lost," 155

Adonais compared with Lycidas, 51

Aldersgate Street, Milton's home in, 67, 83

'Allegro, L.," 49-50

Andreini, his "Adamo" supposed

to have suggested "Paradise Lost," 169

Anglesey, Earl of, visits Milton, 186

"Animadversions upon the Remonstrant," 72

"Apology for Smectymnuus," 72 "Arcades," 44

Areopagitica, the," 78; argument of, 79-82

Arian opinions of Milton, 159,

191

Ariosto, Milton borrows from, 164 Artillery Walk, Milton's last

house, 144

"At a Solemn Music," 33 Aubrey's biographical notices of

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C.

Caedmon, question of Milton's
indebtedness to, 169
Calderon's "Magico Prodigioso"
compared with "Comus," 54;
with "Paradise Lost," 163
Cambridge in Milton's time, 22
Cardinal Barberini receives Milton,
62

Caroline, Princess, her kindness to

Milton's daughter, 195
Chalfont St. Giles, Milton's
residence at, 173

Chappell, W., Milton's college

tutor, 24

Charles I., illegal government of,
30; expedition against the
Scots, 67; execution of, 100;
alleged authorship of "Eikon
Basilike," 105-107; a bad king,
but not a bad man, 110
Charles II., restoration of, 138;
favour to Roman Catholics, 188
Christ's College, Milton at, 22
"Christian Doctrine," Milton's
treatise on, 99, 190-193
"Civil Power in Ecclesiastical
Causes," 132

Clarke, Deborah, Milton's young-
est daughter; her reminiscences
of her father, 195
Clarke, Mr. Hyde, his discoveries
respecting Milton's ancestry,
14, 15

Clarke, Sir T., Milton's MSS.
preserved by, 129

Coleridge, Milton compared with,
41; on Milton's taste for music,
63; on "Paradise Regained,"

178

Comenius, educational method of,
76

Commonwealth, Milton's views
of a free, 136

"Comus," production of, 38; 44,
46; criticism on, 53-55
'Considerations on the likeliest
means to remove Hirelings out
of the Church," 133

Copernican theory only partly
adopted in "Paradise Lost,"
158

Cosmogony of Milton, 157
Cromwell, Milton's character of,
121; Milton's advice to, 122

D.

Dante and Milton compared, 160
Daughters, character of Milton's,

142

Davis, Miss, Milton's suit to, 94
Deity, imperfect conception of, in
"Paradise Lost," 154
Denham, Sir J., his admiration of
"Paradise Lost," 177
Diodati, Milton's friendship with,
21; verses to, 25; letters to,
39, 41, 55; death of, 65; Mil-
ton's elegy on, 43, 67
"Doctrine

and Discipline of
Divorce," 79, 87-91
Dryden, on "Paradise Lost,"
177; visits Milton, 187; dra-
matizes "Paradise Lost," 187
Du Moulin, Peter, author of
"Regii Sanguinis Clamor ad
Cœlum," 118

E.

Edmundson, Mr. G., on Milton
and Vondel, 170

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