John Milton
1608–1674
John Milton, after Shakespeare the greatest English poet, was born in Bread Street in Cheapside on 9 December 1608, the son of a prosperous
scrivener, a Puritan and musical composer. At St Paul’s school he distinguished himself as a scholar and poet. In 1625 he entered
Christ’s College Cambridge, where he seems to have been chastised by his tutor, and was certainly rusticated for a short time in 1626.
After his return he went through the university course with credit, achieving his M.A. in 1632. Archbishop
Laud’s rule deterred the young Puritan from taking orders; and at Horton in Buckinghamshire, to where his father had retired, he settled
with the distinct purpose of making himself a poet by study and self-discipline. His poetical genius had already been attested by the noble
Hymn on the Nativity and At a Solemn Music perhaps
L’Allegro and Il Penseroso, as well as much admirable Latin verse; and at Horton he produced if not
L’Allegro and Il Penseroso, at least Comus and
Lycidas.
Comus was written at the instance of the musician Henry Lawes to celebrate Lord
Bridgewater’s assumption of the wardenship of the Welsh Marches, and was performed at Ludlow in 1634.
Lycidas was evoked by the loss at sea of his friend Edward King in 1637. These four works were, of themselves, sufficient to place
him in the first rank of English poets. In 1638–39 he paid a fifteen month visit to Italy, where he was cordially received by the
Italian literati. His return was saddened by tidings of the death of his friend Diodati, whom he celebrated in
Damon, the finest and the last of his Latin poems. He settled in St
Bride’s churchyard, afterwards, in Aldersgate Street, and devoted himself to the education of his
siste’s children, the two young Phillipses.
Paradise Lost as a mystery or miracle play gradually dawned upon his mind; but the Civil War long silenced
Milton’s mind except for an occasional sonnet. The tracts which he now poured forth (three in 1641 and two in 1642, all on church
government) are as truly lyrical inspirations as any of his poems.
In June 1642 he married Mary Powell, daughter of an Oxfordshire squire, a debtor of his
father’s. After a trial of matrimony she went back to her friends, under promise to return at Michaelmas, but stayed away four years.
Milton’s Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce was published in 1643, and enlarged in
1643–44. He replied to his opponents, mainly the Presbyterians, in three supplementary pamphlets, and a threat of prosecution by a
parliamentary committee occasioned in November 1644 his most famous
prose–work, Areopagitica, a Speech for the Liberty if Unlicensed
Printing.
In 1645 he was reported to be taking serious steps to carry out his views on divorce by paying his addresses to
‘a very handsome and witty gentlewoman’, when the absent wife thought it time to return; and by September his household was
re-established in the Barbican. His wife’s parents and eight brothers and sisters took up their abode with Milton for a year. She bore
him three daughters, and died in 1652. He lost his father in 1647. Meanwhile, other pupils, mostly sons of friends, had been added to his
nephews, and to the world Milton seemed to be a schoolmaster; but his defence of the execution of Charles
I. (January 1649), The Tenure of Kings, was followed by his appointment as
‘Secretary of Foreign Tongues’, whose duty it was to draft diplomatic correspondence with foreign powers, then carried on in
Latin. His Pro Populo Anglicano Defensio (1651), made him famous all over Europe but cost him his eyesight. By 1652 the impaired
vision had wholly failed. He married again (1656), and again lost his wife in 1658. The magnificent sonnet on the massacre of the
Vaudois was written in 1655. Several controversial pamphlets against Alexnder Morus
followed.
Milton had supported Cromwell in all his extra-legal measures, though his early republican hopes must have been bitterly disappointed. He
remained secretary until the abdication of Richard Cromwell, when he again turned pamphleteer. His writings of this period are greatly
inferior in splendour of diction, and are conclusive of his lack of practical statesmanship. The Restoration drove him into hiding, for
few more had bitterly exasperated the Royalist party. The Defensio was burned by the hangman, and Milton was arrested but soon
released. About the beginning of 1661 he was settled in Jewin Street, and afterwards in Artillery Walk, Bunhill Fields.
Paradise Lost was probably commenced some time before the Restoration, dictated to an
amanuensis (usually a daughter) and completed
about 1663. Plague and fire warred against the publication, which, after some difficulty on the
licenser’s part, took place in August 1667. The sale of thirteen hundred copies within twenty months shows that
Milton’s claim to a place among the great poets was admitted from the first. The year 1671 witnessed the publication of
Paradise Regained, probably written in 1665–66, and of Samson
Agonistes, written later still. Samson dramatic in form, is lyrical in substance, a splendid lament over the
author’s forlorn old age and the apostasy, as he deemed it, of his nation. Meanwhile his daughters were unhappy and impatient at
their tasks as readers and amanuenses that his house was one of sadness up to his marriage in 1663 to Elizabeth Minshull, the daughter
of a Cheshire yeoman. She restored comfort to his house but failed to conciliate his daughters who, after being taught embroidery at their
father’s expense, left to set up for themselves. Milton now addressed himself to other unfulfilled ideas of his youth, the early history
of England and works, upon grammar and logic – of little
value.
His Latin Treatise of Christian Doctrine proves he was now an Arian, indifferent to all rites and ceremonies, as anti-Sabbatarian as
Luther, and willing to tolerate polygamy. Reduced in means by the great fire in 1666, but still above want, execrated as a regicide, but
acclaimed by the discerning as the first poet of his age, cheerful and joyous, singing even during fits of gout, he closed his chequered
life on 8 November 1674. He was buried in St Gile’s Cripplegate.
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