Life Of John Milton by Richard Garnett (best free novels TXT) 📖
- Author: Richard Garnett
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This I Have Lost, And That I Must Lament
For Ever. In My Attributes I Stood
So High And So Heroically Great,
In Lineage So Supreme, And With A Genius
Which Penetrated With A Glance The World
Beneath My Feet, That, Won By My High Merit,
A King--Whom I May Call The King Of Kings,
Because All Others Tremble In Their Pride
Before The Terrors Of His Countenance--
In His High Palace, Roofed With Brightest Gems
Of Living Light--Call Them The Stars Of Heaven--
Named Me His Counsellor. But The High Praise
Stung Me With Pride And Envy, And I Rose
In Mighty Competition, To Ascend
His Seat, And Place My Foot Triumphantly
Upon His Subject Thrones. Chastised, I Know
The Depth To Which Ambition Falls. For Mad
Was The Attempt; And Yet More Mad Were Now
Repentance Of The Irrevocable Deed.
Therefore I Chose This Ruin With The Glory
Of Not To Be Subdued, Before The Shame
Of Reconciling Me With Him Who Reigns
By Coward Cession. Nor Was I Alone,
Nor Am I Now, Nor Shall I Be, Alone.
And There Was Hope, And There May Still Be Hope;
For Many Suffrages Among His Vassals
Hailed Me Their Lord And King, And Many Still
Are Mine, And Many More Perchance Shall Be."
A Striking Proof That Resemblance Does Not Necessarily Imply Plagiarism.
Milton's Affinity To Calderon Has Been Overlooked By His Commentators;
Chapter 9 Pg 92But Four Luminaries Have Been Named From Which He Is Alleged To Have
Drawn, However Sparingly, In His Golden Urn--Caedmon, The Adamus Exul Of
Grotius, The Adamo Of The Italian Dramatist Andreini, And The Lucifer Of
The Dutch Poet Vondel. Caedmon, First Printed In 1655, It Is But Barely
Possible That He Should Have Known, And Ere He Could Have Known Him The
Conception Of "Paradise Lost" Was Firmly Implanted In His Mind. External
Evidence Proves His Acquaintance With Grotius, Internal Evidence His
Knowledge Of Andreini: And Small As Are His Direct Obligations To The
Italian Drama, We Can Easily Believe With Hayley That "His Fancy Caught
Fire From That Spirited, Though Irregular And Fantastic Composition."
Vondel's Lucifer--Whose Subject Is Not The Fall Of Adam, But The Fall Of
Satan--Was Acted And Published In 1654, When Milton Is Known To Have
Been Studying Dutch, But When The Plan Of "Paradise Lost" Must Have Been
Substantially Formed. There Can, Nevertheless, Be No Question Of The
Frequent Verbal Correspondences, Not Merely Between Vondel's Lucifer And
"Paradise Lost," But Between His Samson And "Samson Agonistes." Milton's
Indebtedness, So Long Ago As 1829, Attracted The Attention Of An English
Poet Of Genius, Thomas Lovell Beddoes, Who Pointed Out That His
Lightning-Speech, "Better To Reign In Hell Than Serve In Heaven," Was A
Thunderbolt Condensed From A Brace Of Vondel's Clumsy Alexandrines,
Which Beddoes Renders Thus:--
"And Rather The First Prince At An Inferior Court
Than In The Blessed Light The Second Or Still Less."
Mr. Gosse Followed Up The Inquiry, Which Eventually Became The Subject
Of A Monograph By Mr. George Edmundson ("Milton And Vondel," 1885). That
Milton Should Have Had, As He Must Have Had, Vondel's Works Translated
Aloud To Him, Is A Most Interesting Proof, Alike Of His Ardour In The
Enrichment Of His Own Mind, And Of His Esteem For The Dutch Poet.
Although, However, His Obligations To Predecessors Are Not To Be
Overlooked, They Are In General Only For The Most Obvious Ideas And
Expressions, Lying Right In The Path Of Any Poet Treating The Subject.
_Je L'aurais Bien Pris Sans Toi._ When, As In The Instance Above Quoted,
He Borrows Anything More Recondite, He So Exalts And Transforms It That
It Passes From The Original Author To Him Like An Angel The Former Has
Entertained Unawares. This May Not Entirely Apply To The Italian
Reformer, Bernardino Ochino, To Whom, Rather Than To Tasso, Milton Seems
Indebted For The Conception Of His Diabolical Council. Ochino, In Many
Respects A Kindred Spirit To Milton, Must Have Been Well Known To Him As
The First Who Had Dared To Ventilate The Perilous Question Of The
Lawfulness Of Polygamy. In Ochino's "Divine Tragedy," Which He May Have
Read Either In The Latin Original Or In The Nervous Translation Of
Bishop Poynet, Milton Would Find A Hint For His Infernal Senate. "The
Introduction To The First Dialogue," Says Ochino's Biographer Benrath,
"Is Highly Dramatic, And Reminds Us Of Job And Faust." Ochino's
Arch-Fiend, Like Milton's, Announces A Masterstroke Of Genius. "God Sent
His Son Into The World, And I Will Send My Son." Antichrist Accordingly
Comes To Light In The Shape Of The Pope, And Works Infinite Havoc Until
Henry Viii. Is Divinely Commissioned For His Discomfiture. It Is A
Token, Not Only Of Milton's, But Of Vondel's, Indebtedness, That, With
Chapter 9 Pg 93Ochino As With Them, Beelzebub Holds The Second Place In The Council,
And Even Admonishes His Leader. "I Fear Me," He Remarks, "Lest When
Antichrist Shall Die, And Come Down Hither To Hell, That As He Passeth
Us In Wickedness, So He Will Be Above Us In Dignity." Prescience Worthy
Of Him Who
"In His Rising Seemed
A Pillar Of State; Deep On His Front Engraven
Deliberation Sat, And Public Care;
And Princely Counsel In His Face Yet Shone."
Milton's Borrowings, Nevertheless, Nowise Impair His Greatness. The
Obligation Is Rather Theirs, Of Whose Stores He Has Condescended To
Avail Himself. He May Be Compared To His Native Country, Which, Fertile
Originally In Little But Enterprise, Has Made The Riches Of The Earth
Her Own. He Has Given Her A National Epic, Inferior To No Other, And
Unlike Most Others, Founded On No Merely Local Circumstance, But Such As
Must Find Access To Every Nation Acquainted With The Most
Widely-Circulated Book In The World. He Has Further Enriched His Native
Literature With An Imperishable Monument Of Majestic Diction, An Example
Potent To Counteract That Wasting Agency Of Familiar Usage By Which
Language Is Reduced To Vulgarity, As Sea-Water Wears Cliffs To Shingle.
He Has Reconciled, As No Other Poet Has Ever Done, The Hellenic Spirit
With The Hebraic, The Bible With The Renaissance. And, Finally, As We
Began By Saying, His Poem Is The Mighty Bridge--
"Bound With Gorgonian Rigour Not To Move,"
Across Which The Spirit Of Ancient Poetry Has Travelled To Modern Times,
And By Which The Continuity Of Great English Literature Has Remained
Unbroken.
Chapter 10 Pg 94In Recording The Publication Of "Paradise Lost" In 1667, We Have Passed
Over The Interval Of Milton's Life Immediately Subsequent To The
Completion Of The Poem In 1663. The First Incident Of Any Importance Is
His Migration To Chalfont St. Giles, Near Beaconsfield, In
Buckinghamshire, About July, 1665, To Escape The Plague Then Devastating
London. Ell Wood, Whose Family Lived In The Neighbourhood Of Chalfont,
Had At His Request Taken For Him "A Pretty Box" In That Village; And We
Are, Says Professor Masson, "To Imagine Milton's House In Artillery Walk
Shuttered Up, And A Coach And A Large Waggon Brought To The Door, And
The Blind Man Helped In, And The Wife And The Three Daughters Following,
With A Servant To Look After The Books And Other Things They Have Taken
Chapter 10 Pg 95With Them, And The Whole Party Driven Away Towards Giles-Chalfont."
According To The Same Authority, Chalfont Well Deserves The Name Of
Sleepy Hollow, Lying At The Bottom Of A Leafy Dell. Milton's Cottage,
Alone Of His Residences, Still Exists, Though Divided Into Two
Tenements. It Is A Two-Storey Dwelling, With A Garden, Is Built Of
Brick, With Wooden Beams, Musters Nine Rooms--Though A Question Arises
Whether Some Of Them Ought Not Rather To Be Described As Closets; The
Porch In Which Milton May Have Breathed The Summer Air Is Gone, But The
Parlour Retains The Latticed Casement At Which He Sat, Though Through It
He Could Not See. His Infirmity Rendered The Confined Situation Less Of
A Drawback, And There Are Abundance Of Pleasant Lanes, Along Which He
Could Be Conducted In His Sightless Strolls:--
"As One Who Long In Populous City Pent,
Where Houses Thick And Sewers Annoy The Air,
Forth Issuing On A Summer's Morn To Breathe
Among The Pleasant Villages And Farms
Adjoined, From Each New Thing Conceives Delight,
The Smell Of Grain, Or Tedded Grass, Or Kine,
Or Dairy, Each Rural Sight, Each Rural Sound."
Milton Was Probably No Stranger To The Neighbourhood, Having Lived
Within Thirteen Miles Of It When He Dwelt At Horton. Ellwood Could Not
Welcome Him On His Arrival, Being In Prison On Account Of An Affray At
What Should Have Been The Paragon Of Decorous Solemnities--A Quaker
Funeral. When Released, About The End Of August Or The Beginning Of
September, He Waited Upon Milton, Who, "After Some Discourses, Called
For A Manuscript Of His; Which He Delivered To Me, Bidding Me Take It
Home With Me And Read It At My Leisure. When I Set Myself To Read It, I
Found It Was That Excellent Poem Which He Entitled 'Paradise Lost.'"
Professor Masson Justly Remarks That Milton Would Not Have Trusted The
Worthy Quaker Adolescent With The Only Copy Of His Epic; We May Be Sure,
Therefore, That Other Copies Existed, And That The Poem Was At This
Date Virtually Completed And Ready For Press. When The Manuscript Was
Returned, Ellwood, After "Modestly, But Freely, Imparting His Judgment,"
Observed, "Thou Hast Said Much Here Of Paradise Lost, But What Hast Thou
To Say Of Paradise Found? He Made No Answer, But Sat Some Time In A
Muse; Then Brake Off That Discourse, And Fell On Another Subject." The
Plague Was Then At Its Height, And Did Not
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