Milton
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1674, in a small house, with but one room on a floor, in Artillery Walk, Bunhill Fields, London. Of his father the records that remain show him to have been a convinced member of
at Milton was allowed to live at home without any ostens
ears as a day-scholar. From his twelfth year onward he was an omnivorous reader, and before he left school had written some boyish verses, void of merit. The next fourteen years
insight into "all seemly and generous arts and affairs." London was a great centre of traffic, a motley crowd of adventurers and traders even in those days, and the boy Milton must often have wandered down to the river below London Bridge to see the ships c
eather-beate
though shrouds
whom the Chorus
state
bound for
an or
bravery on, a
d, and stre
the winds that
is Samson repr
olish pilot, h
rusted to m
usly r
the great sea-beast Leviathan,
me small night-
e happy garden the Ad
who
pe of Hope, a
at sea north-e
urs from th
e Blest, wi
slack their course
grateful smell
those odorous s
s near to Eve in
he work
by skilful ste
uth, or forelan
t so steers, and
to the stars of heaven and the sands of the sea for number. All sorts of characters, nationalities, and costumes were daily to be seen in Paul's Walk, adjoining Milton's school. One sort interests us pre-eminently. "In the general pride of England," says Fynes Moryson, "there is no fit difference made of degrees; for very Bankrupts, Players, and Cutpurses go apparelled like gentlemen." Shakespeare was alive during the first seven years of Milton's life, and was no doubt sometimes a
ll-trod s
s learned
hakespeare, F
native wood
ut these are doubtless the memories of reading. In the Apology for Smectymnuus, when he has to reply to the charge that he "haunted playhouses" during his college days, he retorts the charge, it is true, rather than denies it. Yet the retort bespeaks a certain severity and preciseness in judging of plays and their actors, which can hardly have found gratification in the licenses and exuberances of the contemporary drama. It was not difficult, he remarks, to see plays, "when in the Colleges so many of the young divines, and those
Spenser was still the dominant influence in English poetry. "He hath confessed to me," said Dryden, "that Spenser was his original,"--an incredible statement unless we understand "original" in the sense of his earliest admiration, his poetic godfather who first won him to poetry. He read Shakespeare and Jonson in the first editions. He read Sylvester's translation of Du Bartas, His Divine Weekes and Workes; and perhaps thence conceived the first vague idea of a poem on a kindred subject. It is necessary to insist on his English masters, because, although the greater part of his time and study was devoted to the classics, the instrument that he was to use was learned in a native school. His metre, his magnificent vocabulary, his unerring phraseology, took learning and practice. He attached a high value to his study of English poetry. When he spoke of "our sage and serious Spenser (whom I dare be known to think a better teacher than Scotus or Aquinas)," he was conscious that he was maintaining
had been hastily pulled down; the new government offices that were to replace it had as yet been but partially built, and commanded no general approval. Considered as a social organisation, moreover, the Church throughout large parts of the country had fallen into a state not unlike decay. Richard Baxter, whose testimony there is no sufficient reason to reject, tells of its state in Shropshire during the years of his youth, from 1615 onwards:--"We lived in a country that had but little preaching at all: In the Village where I was born there was four Readers successively in Six years time, ignorant Men, and two of them immoral in their lives; who were all my School-masters. In the Village where my Father lived, there was a Reader of about Eighty years of Age that never preached, and had two Churches about Twenty miles distant: His Eyesight failing him, he said Common-Prayer without Book; but for the Reading of the Psalms and Chapters he got a Common Thresher and Day-Labourer one year, and a Tayl
t against this state of things, were at fierce variance with each other, and Milton's ear, from his youth upward, was "pealed with noises loud and ruinous." The age of Shakespeare was irrecoverably past, and it was impossible for any but a few imperturbable Cyrenaics, like Herrick, to "fleet the time carelessly, as they d
But they are also the poems of an age that was closing, and they have a touch of the sadness of evening. "I know not," says Dr. Johnson, speaking of L'Allegro and Il Penseroso, "whether the characters are kept sufficiently apart. No mirth can indeed be found in his melancholy, but I am afraid that I always meet some melancholy in his mirth." It
t last my
he peacefu
gown and m
sit and ri
r that heave
erb that si
experienc
g like prop
periods. It was not so; political passion dominates and informs all his later poems, dictating even their subjects. How was it possible for him to choose King Arthur and his Round Table for the subject of his epic, as he had intended in his youthful days; when chivalry and the spirit of chivalry had fought its last fight on English soil, full in the sight of all men, round the forlorn banner of King Charles? The policy of Laud and Stratford kept Milton out of the Church, and sent him into retirement at Horton; the same policy, it may be plausibly c
n the fighters in the plain. Before we follow him we may well "interpose a little ease" by looking at some of the beauties proper to the ear
with secu
hamlets w
erry bells
ocund reb
youth and
the chequ
d old come f
nshine
air. Already the Maypole, that "great stinking idol," as an Elizabethan Puritan called it, had been doomed to destruction. So
and harmelesse
e love and am
llage did a M
es and May gam
lusty Yonk
sses danced t
to their banquet
r'd the better
nter's Tale where Shakespeare draws a vivid
tles, Manners, T
hey beheld the
down unto the
try gallants da
th his tenant's
liking, and es
ing-man, and
some farme, wi
oles, what shou
lmost banish't
e rebellious
ime was harmeles
gnant spirit w
tall Pirami
*
ive towne, whi
-fires burn'd an
assell-cups we
er of Peace an
ese went down, th
hismes and hum
d I hope thy
see once more
om Milton. The Court roysterers, the Hectors, Nickers, Scourers, and Mohocks, among whom were numbered Sedley and Rochester, and others of the best p
d palaces he
ous cities, w
s above their
d outrage; an
eets, then wand
own with inso
hese later days are glanc
ordliest in
asted priest th
aught religion
people on th
insolent, u
ave livers, majestic, but not sprightly. In L' Allegro the morning song of the milk-maid is "blithe," and the music of the village dance is "jocund." But Eve is described as "jocund" and "bl
meets the eye in the Hesperian wildernesses of Eden. Or take the world of fairy lore that Milton inherited from the Elizabethans--a world to which not only Sh
s told of m
Mab the ju
cription is put into the mouth of Comus himself, chief of
eas, with all th
on in waverin
tawny sands
fairies and th
brook and f
hs decked wit
wakes and pa
ight to do
he is master of! The pleasure that Milton forswore was a young god, the companion of Love and Youth, not an aged Silenus among the wine-skins. He viewed and described one whole realm of pagan loveliness, and then he turned his face the other way, and never looked back. Love is of the valley, and he lifted his eyes to the hills. His guiding star was not Christianity, which in its most characteristic and beautiful aspects had no fasc
e of men the
dering lo
perish as th
name, no mor
Chorus in Sam
hou hast sole
d graces emin
eat work,
fety, which in
's Puritanism enabled him to combine his classical and Biblical studies, to reconcile his pagan and Christian admirati
icius, Curius
ghty things, an
offered from th
e himself. There is no beatific vision to keep his eyes from wandering among the shows of earth. Milton's heaven is colder than his earth, the home of Titans, whose employ is political and martial. W
s He, with
ience from th
consolation h
mind, all pa
on of the young, who, while they read poetry by the ear and eye for its sonorous suggestions, and its processions of vague shapes, love Milton; but when they come to read it for its matter and sentiment, leave him--in most cases never to return. The atmosphere of his later poems is that of some great public institution. Heaven is an Oriental despotism. Hell is a Secession parliament. In the happy garden itself th
n can ever know. The reader finds no transaction in which he can be engaged; beholds no condition in which he can by any effort of imagination place himself; he has, therefore, little natural curiosity and
e incomparable grandeur of Milton's characters and situations springs. The conversations that he records are like international parleyings. Eve
t more
than with hi
n himself was
an the tedious
hen their ric
and grooms bes
owd and sets t
doings he felt himself to be a "cause," an agent of mighty purposes. This it is that more than excuses, it glorifies, his repeated magniloquent allusions to himself throughout the prose works. Holding himself on trust or on com
some ge
rds favour my
he pass
peace be to m
singular ending, no doubt, to an elegy! But it is blind and hasty to conclude that therefore the precedent laments are "not to be considered as the effusion of real passion." A soldier's burial is not the less honoured because his comrades must turn from his grave to give their thought and strength and courage to the cause which was also his. The maimed rites, interrupted by the trumpet calling to action, are a loftier commemoration than the desolatin
o time for la
ause. Samson ha
and heroicly
roic, on
reve
reathes through all his numerous refere
yet comely,
some great m
f people, cities, states, and councils of the wise and eminent, through the wide expanse of anxious and listening E
rts me, do
riend, to have lo
defence, my
urope talks fr
pathos of a lost cause. It was remarked by Johnson that there is in the Paradise Lost little opportunity for the pathetic; only one passage, indeed, is allowed by him to be truly deserving of that n
g with mortal v
te, though fall
ough fallen, an
d with dangers
yet not alon
umbers nightly
st. Still gove
t audience fin
lers goes roaring by. The king is enjoying his own again; and the poet, hunted and harassed in his last retreat, raises his petition again to the Muse whom he had invoked at the beginning of his task,--not Clio nor her sisters, but the spirit of heavenly power and heavenly wisdom; his mind reverts to that
off the barbar
nd his revel
ut that tore th
ere woods and
ll the savage
oice; nor could
l not thou, who
eavenly, she a
ich had gone a-begging among the politicians of his time, were stripped by him of the rags of circumstance, and cleansed of its dust, to be enthroned where they might secure a hearing for all time. The surprise that he prepared for the courtiers of the Restoration world was like Samson's revenge, in that it fell on them from above; and, as elsewhere in the poem of Samson Agonistes, Milton was thinking not very remotely of his own case when he wrote that jubilant semi-chorus, with the marvellous fugal succession of figures, wherein Samson, and b
ough blind
thought exti
rd eyes i
ry virt
ashes into
evening dr
on the per
s in ord
atic fowl, b
thunder bolted
e, given
d overthrown
self-beg
abian woo
cond knows
rewhile a
r ashy womb
ourishes, the
t unacti
r body die, he
bird, ages