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THE LIFE OF MILTON.
PART I.
L' ETA PRECORSE, E LA SPERANZA; E PRESTI PAREANO I FIOR, QUANDO N' USCIRO I FRUTTI. TASSO.
THE character of MILTON has been scrutinized with all the minuteness of investigation, which opposite passions could suggest. The virulent antagonist and the enraptured idolater have pursued his steps with equal perti∣nacity: nor have we wanted men of learning and virtue, who, devoid of prejudice and enthusiasm, both in politics and in poetry, have endeavoured to weigh his merits ex∣actly in the balance of truth and reason.
What new light then can be thrown upon a life, whose incidents have been so eagerly collected, and so frequently retailed? What novelty of remark can be expected in a review of poems, whose beauties and blemishes have been elaborately examined in critical dissertations, that almost rival in excellence the poetry they discuss? Assuredly but little; yet there remains, perhaps, one method of giving a