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SIGNATURE, AS M. A., IN THE GRADUATION BOOK AT CAMBRIDGE, JULY 1632

Joannis Milton

SONG, FROM THE ORIGINAL MS. OF COMUS, IN THE LIBRARY OF TRINITY COLLEGE,

Sabriga faire

CAMBRIDGE, 1634.

Song

Listen big where thou sitt art sitting under the glassic cooks tranflincent wate in twisted braids of lillies knitting

the Loose Wing maine of thy amberdropping
"Isten for deare honours sake
Goddesse of the silver lake
Listin and save

hairę

CONCLUDING LINES OF COMUS, FROM THE SAME MS.

mortalls that would follow me
Love Vertue she alone is free
she can teach you how to clime
higher than the sphean's chime
orif vertue feeble ware
Leaven it setfe would stoope to har

CONCLUDING LINES OF LYCIDAS, FROM THE ORIGINAL MS. DRAFT IN THE LIBRARY
OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE, NOV. 1637.

They sang the uncouth swoing to thoakes e rills
whale of still morne went out with sandals gr
gray
with all
Il taucht the tender tops of various quills
Eager thought wardling his Borilk lay hills,
now the sun had to
and now was dropt into went on the western bay
at last be rose, and twitcht his mantle blew
To morrow to fresh woods and pasturs new

and

out

THE

LIFE OF JOHN MILTON.

CHAPTER I.

ANCESTRY AND KINDRED.

JOHN MILTON was born in his father's house, in Bread-street, in the City of London, on Friday, the 9th of December, 1608, at halfpast six in the morning.1 The year of his birth was the sixth of the reign of the Scottish king, James I, in England.

Milton's father, who was also named John, was by profession a "scrivener." He was settled, in the exercise of that profession, in Bread-street, at least as early as 1603. In a manuscript volume in the British Museum, containing miscellaneous notes relating to the affairs of one John Sanderson, a Turkey merchant of that day, there is a copy of a bond, dated the 4th of March, 1602-3, whereby two persons, styled "Thomas Heigheham of Bethnal-green in the county of Middlesex Esquire, and Richard Sparrow, citizen and goldsmith of London," engage to pay to Sanderson a sum of money on the 5th of May following, the payment to be made "at the new shop of John Milton, scrivener, in Bread-street, London." The name "Jo. Milton, Scriver" is appended as that of the witness in whose

1 Aubrey and Wood. In Aubrey's MS. the circumstance is entered in a manner which vouches for its authenticity. Aubrey had first left the date blank thus:-"He was born Ao Dai - the day of about- o'clock in the;" adding a little farther on in the MS. these words: "Q. Mr. Chr Milton to see the date of his bro. birth." Then, farther on still, at the top of a new sheet of smaller size than the rest, there are written in a clear hand, which is certainly not Aubrey's, these words: "John Milton was born the 9th of December, 1608, die Veneris, half an hour after six in the morning." It is to be concluded that Aubrey had, in the interval, seen Christopher Milton, and procured from him the

date he wanted. Possibly, indeed, Christopher wrote down the words himself. They seem as if they had been taken from the family Bible. Wood in his Fasti makes the time of Milton's birth "between six and seven o'clock in the morning; " but in a MS. of his which I have seen, containing brief notes for biographies of eminent persons (Ashm. 8519), he adheres to the more exact statement "half an hour after six." The note about Milton in this MS. contains nothing but the dates and places of his birth and death.

2 Lansdowne MS. 241, f. 58; first cited, I believe, by Mr. Hunter, in his Milton Gleanings, p. 10.

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