MM r jr ^ | j*t£~ ' 1^, I &yv) A ,> iM'h {Vi^.w ■' M rt . Im&Y Iy ^ ; nv j' «k CC/XOCOC/5COCOCOCO^C/3^0CO X>- £ G „Zw :!? S JOHN SPARROW g s v/ac/acoc/acoc/ac/ac/ac^cococ/a- f -v M __ ff ! 1 N J t m '■ I l^s ( 5 ) THE L I F E O F John Milton. To T HOMAS R.AULINS of Kilreag in Herefordshire Efq; I SEND You at length, my bed Friend, what you have fo often and eameftly follicited me to write, the Life of MILTON, a Man eminent at home and famous abroad for his univerfal Learning, Sagacity, and (olid Judg¬ ment : but particularly noted as well for thofe excellent Volumes he wrote on A th -v / The Life of John Milton. 7 fh ould never be mention'd ; except in the Caufes or Efife&s, Cure or Continu¬ ance, there happens fomthing remark¬ able, and for the benefit of Mankind to know. I had not therfore related Mil¬ ton's Headachs in his Youth, were it not for the influence which this Indifpo- fition had afterwards on his Eys; and that his Blindnefs was raflily imputed by his Enemies to the avenging Judg» ment of God. Secondly, In the Cha¬ racters of SeCts, and Parties, Books or Opinions, I (hall produce his own words, as I find 'em in his Works; that thofe who approve his Reafons, may ow all the Obligation to himfelf, and that I may elcape the blame of fuch as may diflike what he fays. For it is commonly feen, that Hiftorians are liif- peCted rather to make their Hero what they would have him to be, than fuch as he really was; and that, as they are promted by different Paflions, they put thofe words in his mouth which they might not fpeak themfelves without in¬ curring fom danger, and being accus'd A 4 per- . 8 The Life of John Milton. perhaps of Flattery or Injuftice : but 1 am neither writing a Satyr, nor a Pane¬ gyric upon Milton, but publifhing the true Hiftory of his Anions, Works, and Opinions. In the third place, I would not have it expected that when I quote a few Verfes or Paffages in a dif¬ ferent Language, I fhould always pre¬ tend to tranflate 'em, when the whole turn or fancy abfolutely depends upon the force of the Original words ,• for the Ignorant could be nothing the wifer, and the beft Tranflation would fpoil their Beauty to the Learned. But this hap¬ pens fo rarely, and almoft only during his Travels abroad, that it fcarce deferv'd an Advertifment. The ampleft part of my Materials I had from his own Books, where, conftrain'd by the Diflfamations of his Enemys, he often gives an ac¬ count of himfelf. I learnt lom Parti¬ culars from a Perlon that had bin once his Amanuenfis, which were confirm'd to me by his Daughter now dwelling in London, and by a Letter written to one at my defire from his laft Wife, who is ftill The Life of John Milton. p ftill alive. I perus'd the Papers of one of his Nephews, learnt what I could in Difcourfe with the other} and laftly confulted fuch of his Acquaintance, as, after the befb inquiry, I was able to dis¬ cover. Thus completely furnifh'd, I undertook, moft ingenious Sir, the fol¬ lowing Work, as well to oblige you, as to inform Pofterity} and perform d what I knew would be acceptable to my Friend with as much pleafure as ever you per¬ us'd our Author's excellent Sheets. JOhn Milton, the Son likewife of John M ilton, and Sarah Cas- ton, a Woman exemplary for her Liberality to the Poor, was born in London, in the Year of Chrift 1606. a Gentleman by his Education and Family, being defcended from the M1 l- tons of Milton in Oxford/hire; tho if you confider him in his admirable Works or Genius, he was truly and eminently noble. But he had too much good Senfe to value himfelf upon any other Qualities except thofe of his Mind, and which only he could properly call his own: for all external and adventitious Titles, as they may at the pleafure of a Tyrant, or by an un- fortunat Attemt againft his Government, be quite abolifh'd ; fo we often find in Hereditary Ho- TheLife of John Milton. 11 Difcourfe, John Milton was deftin'd to be a Scholar, and partly under domeftic Tea¬ chers (wherof one was Thomas Young, to whom the firft of his familiar Letters is in- fcrib'd) and partly under Dr. G/7/, the chief Mafter of PauPs School (to whom like wife the fifth of the fame Letters is written) he made an incredible Progrefs in the knowlege of Words and Things, his Diligence and Incli¬ nation outftripping the care of his Inftru&ors. After the twelfth Year of his Age, fuch was his infatiable. thirft for Learning, he feldom went to bed before midnight. This was the firft undoing of his Eys, to whofe natural de¬ bility were added frequent Headachs, which could not retard or extinguifh his laudable Paf- fion for Letters. Being thus initiated in feveral Tongues, and having not flightly tailed the inexpreffible Sweets of Philofophy, he was fent at 15 to ChriJPs College in Cambridg to purfue more arduous and folid Studies. This fame Year he gave feveral Proofs of his early Genius for Poetry, wherin he afterwards fucceded fo happily, that to all Ages he'l continue no lefs the Ornament and Glory of England, than H o- m e r is own'd to be that of Greece, and V i r- g i l of Italy. He firft tranflated fom Pfalms into Englifh Verfe, wherof the 114th begins in this manner. When 11 The Life of John Milton. When the bleft Seed oFTerah's faithful Son, After long toil their Liberty had won, And paft from Pharian Fields to Can/tan Land, Led by the ftrength of the Almighty's Hand; Jehovah's Wonders were in Ifrael fhown, His Praife and Glory was in Ifrael known. Ip his feventeenth Year he wrote a handfom Copy of Verfes on the Death of a Sifter's Child that dy'd of a Cough ; and the fame Year a Latin Elegy on the Death of the Bifhop of Wmchejter, with another on that of Ely. 'Twas then alfo that he compos'd his fine Poem on the Gunpouder Treafon; concerning all which and the reft of his Juvenil pieces, the judicious Morho f, in his Polyhiflor Litera- rim, fays, that Milton's Writings fhew him to have bin a Man in his very Childhood ; and that thefe Poems are excedingly above the ordinary Capacity of that Age. Hecontinu'd in Cambridg feven years, where he liv'd with great Reputation, and generally belov'd, till taking the degree of Mafter of Arts, and per¬ forming hisExercifes with much applaufe, he left the Univerfity : for he aim'd at none of thofe Profeflions that require a longer ftay in that place. Som of his Academic Perform¬ ances are ftill extant among his occafional Po¬ ems, and at the end of his familiar Letters. The five fucceding years he liv'd with his Fa- 7he Life of John Milton. 15 fee him now appear in a more ferious Scene, tho yet a Child incomparifon of the Figure Ije af¬ terwards made in the World. The Death of his Mother happening likewife about this time facilitated his defign, which was with his Fa¬ ther's leave to travel into foren Regions, being perfuaded that he could not better difcern the Preeminence or Defefts of his own Country, than by obferving the Cuftoms and Inftituti- ons of others; and that the fludy of never fo many Books, without the advantages of Con- verfation, ferves only to render a Man either a ftupid Fool, or an infufferable Pedant. Firft therfore he procedes to France with one Ser¬ vant, and no Tutor: for fuch as ftill need a Pedagog are not fit to go abroad ; and thofe who are able to make a right ufe of their Tra¬ vels, ought to be the free Matters of their own Aflions, their good Qualifications being fuf- ficient to introduce 'em into all places, and to prefent 'em to the moft deferving Perfons. He had an elegant Letter of Dire&ion and Advice from the famous Sir Henry W 0 t t o n, who was a long time Ambaffador from King James the Firft to the Republic of Venice. Being arriv'd at Paris, he was moft kindly re- ceiv'd by the Englifb Ambaffador, who recom¬ mended him to the famous Grot ius, then Ambaffador alfo from Queen Christina of Sweden at the French Court: for we may eafily imagin that Milton was not a little defirous to be known to the firft Perfon then in the 16 The Life of John Milton/ the World for reading and latitude of Judgment, to fpeak nothing of his other meritorious Cha¬ racters. From hence he parted for Italy, where, after pafling thro feveral noted Places, he came at length to Florence ; a City for the Politenefs of the Language, and the Civility of the Inha¬ bitants, he always infinitly admir'd. In this place he ftaid about two months, and was dai¬ ly aflifting at thofe learned Conferences which they hold in their privat Academys, according to the laudable Cuftom of both for the improvement of Letters, and the begetting or maintaining of Friendfhip. During this time he contrafted an intimat Acquaintance with feveral ingenious Men, moft of which have fince made a noife in the World, and deferve a mention in this place : I mean Gaddi, Da- ti, FrESCOBALDI, F r a n c i n i, bon- mattei, coltellin 0,C himentel- l i, and feveral others. With thefe he kept a conftant Correfpondence, particularly with Carolo Dati, a Nobleman of Florence, to whom he wrote the tenth of his Familiar Epiftles, and who gave him the following Te- ftimonial of his Efteem. Joamt The Life of John Milton. \y foanni Miltoni Londinenfi, fuveni patria & virtutibus eximio. VIRO qui mult a peregrinatione, Jludio cunc- ta orbis terrarum perfpexit, ut novus V- lyffes omnia ubique ab omnibus apprehenderet. Po- lyglotto, in cujus ore lingua jam deperdita fic re- vivifcunt, ut idiomata omnia fint in ejus laudibus infacunda ; & jure ea per collet, ut admirationes & plaufus populorum ab propria fapientia excita- tos, intelligat. llli, cujus animi dotes corporif que fenfus ad admirationem commovent, & per ipfam motum ctiique auferunt: cujus opera ad plaufus hortantur, fed venuflate vocem auditori- bus adimunt. Qui in memoria tot us orbis: in in¬ tellect u fapientia : in voluntate ardor gloria: in ore eloquentia. Harmonicos coeleflium Sphara- rum fonitus, Afironomia duce, audienti; charade- res mirabilium natura, per quos Dei magnitudo defcribitur, magiftra Philofophia legenti; antiqui- tatum latebras, vetujlatis excidia, eruditionis Ambages, comite afftdua autorum led tone, exqui- renti, refauranti, percurrenti. At cur nitor in arduum ? Mi in cujus virtutibus evulgandis or a fama non fuffciant, nec hominum fiupor in laudandis J at is efl, reverentia & amor is ergo hoc ejus merit is debit urn admirationis tributum offer t Carolus Datus Patricius Florentinus, Tonto homini Servus, tanta virtutis Am at or. B I The Life of John Milton. 19 From his belov'd Florence he took his Journy next to Rome, where he ftay'd two other Months to fee the miferable Remains of that famous City, once the glorious Mi lire is of the World, and defervedly fo, as being then not only the faireft thing under Heaven ; but that, till the Ambition of a few Perfons corrupted her equal Government, fhe extended Liberty and Learning as far as the Glory of her Name, or the Terror of her Arms. Here, no doubt, all the Examples he had hitherto read of the Vir¬ tue, Eloquence, Wifdom, or Valor of her an- tient Citizens, occur'd to his mind; and could not but opprefs with grief his generous Soul, when with his own eys he faw Rome now the chief Seat of the raoft exquifit Tyranny exer- cis'd by efteminat Priefts, not reigning in the World thro any conceiv'd opinion of their Ju- ftice, or dread of their Courage (for to thefe Qualities they are known and fworn Enemys) but deluding men with unaccountable Fables, and difarming 'em by imaginary Fears, they fill their heads firft wirh Superftition, and then their own Pockets with their Mony. Here he became acquainted with the celebrated Lucas Holstenius the Vatican Librarian, who us'd him with great Humanity, and readily lhew'd him all the Greet Authors, whether publifh'd or otherwife, that paft his Care and Emendations: He alfoprefented him to Car¬ dinal Barb e ri n r, who at an entertainment ofMufic, perform'dathisown expence, look'd B 2 for 2 o The Life of John Milton. for him in the Croud, and gave him a kind In¬ vitation. To thank Holstenius for all thefe Favors, Milton wrote afterwards from Florence the ninth of his Familiar Letters. At Rome he likewife commenc'd a Friendfhip with the Poet Giovanni Sals.illi, who in the following Tetraftich extols him for writing fo correftly in Greecy Latiny and Italian. Cede Meles, cedat deprejfa Mincius urnay Sebetus Taffum definat ufque loqui: At Thamefis victor cunctis ferat altior undasy Nam per te, Mtlto> par tribus unus erit. Mil t o n in returnfent toSALSi lli,fhort- ly after lying fick, thofe fine Scazons which may be read among his Juvenil Poems. And here too did Selvaggi adorn him with this Diftich. Gratia Maonidem, jaclet fibi Roma Maronem: Anglia Miltonum j act at utrique par em. Having departed from Rome to Naples, he was introduced by his Fellow Traveller to Gio¬ vanni Battista Man so, Marquifs of Villa, a Perfon moft nobly defcended, of great Authority, renownM for his military At- ■chievments, and a Patron of learned Men. To him the famous Tasso infcribM his Poem of Friendfhip, and makes honorable mention of 21 The Life of John Milton. their Liberty, Intending therfore to return to Rome, he was advis'd by fom Merchants to the contrary ; for they had learnt from their Correfpondents, that the English Jefuits were framing Plots againft him by reafon of the great Freedom he us'd in his Difcourfes of Re¬ ligion. Notwithftanding, having refolv'd not to begin any Difputes, but, being ask'd, not to diffemble his Sentiments whatever might in- fue, he went the fecond time to Rome, and ftay'd there two months longer, neither con¬ cealing his Name, nor declining openly to de¬ fend the Truth under the Pope's nofe, when a- ny thought fit to attack him : yet he returned fafe to his learned and affe&ionat Friends in Florence. I forgot all this while to mention that he paid a Vifit to Galileo, then an old man, and a Prifoner to the Inquifition for thinking otherwife in Aftronomy than pleas'd the Francifcan and Dominican Friers. He tarry'd two other months in Florence, and having feen Lucca,, Bononia, Ferrara, he arriv'd in Venice. After fpending one month here, andfhipping off all the Books he colleCted in his Travels, he came thro Verona, Milan, crofs the Alps, and along the Lake Lemanno to Geneva, where he contracted an intimat Familiarity with Gi¬ ovanni Diodati, a noted Profeffor of Divinity, and was known to feveral others, particularly to the celebrated Critic and Anti¬ quary Ezechiel Spanhemjus now a - live, to whom he wrote the 17 th of his Familiar * Letters, The Life of John Milton. 2} Letters,and who,together with Calandri- n 1, and fom more of that City, fent him intelli¬ gence afterwards concerning his Antagonill: Morus, wherof in due order. So leaving this place, and palling back again thro France, he did after one year and three month's Pe¬ regrination return fafe into England, much about the fame time that King Charles the |ltii Firft made his fecond unfuccefsful Expedition a- *,» gainft the Scots. As foon as the Complements of Friends or Acquaintance were over, he hir'd a handfom Lodging in the City, to be a retreat for himfelf and his Books in fuch uncertain and troublefom times. But he continu'd a long while inconfolable for the lofs of his deareft Friend and Schoolfellow CharlesDioda- ti, mention'd before, who dy'd in his ablence. He was from Lucca originally, but an Englifh- man born, a Student in Phyfic, and an excel¬ lent Scholar, as I have good reafons to believe, and appears by two Letters of his to Milton, very handfomly written, and which I have now in my hands. Our Author in mournful Notes bitterly laments the imma¬ ture fate of this young Gentleman, whom he denotes by the appellation of Damon in an Eclog nothing inferior to the Maronian , and which is to be ftill feen among his Latin Mifcellanies. By this piece we plainly find that he had already conceiv'd the Plan of an Epic Poem, wherof he then defign'd the Subject fhould be the warlike Attions of the old Bn- B 4 tifb The Life of John Milton. ij I faid above that it was by his Converfation with the Marquifs of Villa, who fo nobly honored the immortal Memory of Tasso, that our Milton form'd his vaft Defign, That this was not a mere Conjecture, and that King Arthur alfo was to be the He¬ ro of that piece, let but thefe Verfes of his Man fa be confider'd. 0 mihi ft me a fors talem concede amicum Phceb^os decor affe viros qui tarn bene nor it, Siquando indigents revocabo in car mind reges, Artarumque etiam fub Terr is bella movent em \ Aut die dm invift&focidli feeder e menfe Mdgndnimos Herods, & (0 modo fpiritus adfit) Frdngdm Saxonicas Britonum fub Marte Pha¬ langes. BUT to return to his Lodgings, where we left him, there, both to beeas'd in the reading of the beft Authors, and todifcharge his Duty to his Sifter's Sons that were partly committed to his Tuition, he undertook the care of their E- ducation, and inftrufted them in Latin, Greec, Hebrew and other Oriental Dialefls; likewife in feveral parts of the Mathematics, in Cofmo- graphy, Hiftory, and fom modern Languages, as French and Italian. Som Gentlemen of his intimat Friends, and to whom he could deny nothing, prevailed with him to impart the fame benefits of Learning to their Sons, fpecially fince the trouble was no more wth many than 16 The Life of John Milton. a few. He that well knew the greateft Perfons in all ages to have bin delighted with teaching others the Principles of Knowlege and Virtue, eafily comply'd ; nor was his Succefs unan- fwerable to the opinion which was generally entertained of his Capacity. And not content to acquaint his Difciples with thole Books that are commonly read in the Schools, wherof fe- veral, no doubt, are excellent in their kind, tho others are as trivial or impertinent; he made them likewife read in Latin the antient Authors concerning Husbandry, as CatO, V a r r o, Columella, and Palladi- us; alfo Cornelius Celsus the Phy- fician, Pliny's Natural Hiftory, the Ar¬ chitecture of Vi truvius, the Stratagems of Frontinus, and the Philofophical Po¬ ets Lucretius and Manilius. To the ufual Greec Books, as H o m e r and H e- s i o d, he added Aratus, Dion ys iusPe- riegetes, oppian, Qll i n t u s C a- laber, Apollonius Rhodius, Plu¬ tarch, Xenophon, ^Elian's Tac¬ tics, and the Stratagems of Poly# nus. It was this greateft fign of a good Man in him, and the higheft Obligation he could lay on his Friends, without any fordid or mercenary purpofes, that gave occafion to his Adverfaries with opprobrioufly terming him a School- mafter; tho were this charge as true as it is utterly falfe, I fee not how it fhould any way tend to his Difhonor, if he had bin neceflitat- ed 2 8 The Life of John Milton. ic off the Pomp of Prelacy. As for the Bifhops, many of whom he denys not to have bin good Men, tho not infallible, nor above all human Frailties, he affirms, u that at the beginning, " tho they had renounced the Pope, they hug'd " the Popedom, and fhar'd the Authority a- ney'sJrcadia, This has bin mentioned by others after Milton, and thofe Prayers laid parallel together on divers occafions. One of Milton's Sagacity could not but perceive by the Compofltion, Stile, and timing of this Book, that it was rather the produftion of fom idle Clergyman, than the work of a diftreft Prince, either in perpetual hurry at the head of a flying Army, or remov'd from one Prifon to another during his unfortunat Captivity till his Death. Befides the Theological Phrafes fre¬ quently interfpers'd, there are fuch fanciful Al- lufionsand bold Comments in it upon the fecret Judgments of God, as fmell ranklyof a Syftem or the Pulpit. When he mentions the fate of the Hot hams, by whom he was repuls'dat Hull, he fays of the Father, That his Head was divided from his Body, becaufe his Heart was di¬ vided from the Kjng : and that two Heads were cut off in one Family for affronting the Head of the Commonwealth; the eldejl Son being infecled with the Sin of the Father, againjl the Father of his Country. Thefe and fuch Arguments drawn only from the Book it felf, without any further light, induc'd a great many at that time to fuf- petf the Impofture ; and that becaufe Crom- wel got fuch a Reputation among the Peo¬ ple for his fuppos'd Piety, the Royalifts would reprefent the King to be a wifer Man and bet¬ ter Chriftian. But in the year 1686 Mr. Mi l- li ngton happening to fell the late Lord jto Angle- 11' ■'■imum ■ ■ jggt &» I® mil y ni (th» i.W mil iik bot H, Men tki Soil tail il id 'v Git It to to Gill S1«H »ktt tbtv iiig tils foil wy ta 8S The*Life 0/John Milton. K i s, but really to be a Manfionhoufe for the Bifhops of f¥>inchefier. Fifthly, Dr. Wal¬ ker fays, that Mr. Gauden, the Doftor's Son, his Wife, himfelf, and Mr.Giflord who tranfcrib'd it, did believe it as firmly as any fa ft don in the place where they were; and that in that Family they always fpoke of it among themfelves (whether in Dr. G au- den) prefence or ablence) as undoubtedly written by him, which he never contradi&ed, We learn, Sixthly, that Dr. G a u d f. n, after part of it was printed, gave to Dr. Walker with his own hand what was laft fent to Lou¬ don ; and after fhewing him what it was, feal'd it, giving him cautionary Directions how to deliver it, which he did on Saturday the 23d of December, 1648. for Mr. Roys ton the Printer, to Mr. Peacock Brother to Dr. G a u d &n ' s Steward, who, after the Impref- fion was finifh'd, gave him, for his trouble, fix Books, wherof he always kept one by him. To thefe particulars Dr. Walker adds, that the Reafon why the Covenant is more fa¬ vorably mention'd in Eikon Bafilike, than the King or any other of his Party would do, was beecaufe Dr. Gauden himfelf had taken it: That in the devotional part of this Book there occur feveral Expreffions which were habitual to Dr. Gauden in his Prayers, which al¬ ways in privat and public were conceiv'd or extemporary : and that to his knowlege it was Dr. Gauden, being beft acquainted with the The Life of John Miltoti^ 8p Beauty of his own Sayings, who made that Collection of Sentences out of Eikon Bajilike, irititul'd, Apophthegmata Car oilman a. Thefe and fom Observations about the fame individual Perfons variation of Stue on different SubjeCts, with the facility and frequency of perfonating others, may be further confider'd in Dr. Wal¬ ker's original Account. In this condition flood the Reputation of this Book, till the laft and finiflhing difcovery of the Impofture was made after this manner. Mr. Arthur North, a Merchant now living onTower- hil, London, a man of good Credit, and a Member of the Church of England, marry'd the Sifter of her that was Wife to the Do&or's Son Charles Gaud en, who dying left fom Papers with his Widow, among which Mr. North, being concerned about his Sifter in Law's Affairs, found a whole bundle relat¬ ing to Eikon Bafilike: Thefe Papers old Mrs. Gauden left to her darling Son John, and he to his Brother Charles. There is firft a Letter from Secretary Nicholas to Dr. Gauden, 2. The Copy of a Letter from Bifhop Gauden to Chancellor Hyde, where, among his other Deferts, he pleads that what was don like a King, fhould have a Kinglike Retribution'; and that his defign in it was to comfort and incourage the King's Friends, to expofe his Enemies, and to con¬ vert, &c. There is, 3. The Copy of a Letter from the Biflfrop to the Duke of York, wher- in po The Life of John Milton^ in he ftrongly urges his Services. 4. A Letter under Chancellor Hyde's own hand, dated the 1 phof March, 1661. wherin he expreffes his uneafinefs under the Bilhop's importunity, and excufes his inability yet to ferve him: but towards the Conclufion it contains thefe remark¬ able words; The Particular you mention has in¬ deed bin imparted to me as a Secret; I am forry I ever knew it: and when it ceafes to be a , it will pleafe none but Mr. Milton. There are other Papers in this bundle, but particularly a long Narrative of Mrs.Gauden's own writing, irrefragably fhewing her Husband to be Au¬ thor of Eikon Bafilike. It intirely confirms Dr. Walker's account, and contains moft of the fa£ts we have hitherto related, with ma¬ ny other curious Circumftances too long to be here inferted, yet too extraordinary not to be known ; wherfore I refer the Reader to the 0- riginal Paper, or to the faithful extract made out of it before feveral learned and worthy Perfons, and which is printed in a Paper inti- tul'd, Truth brought to light. Thus came all the World to be convinc'd of this notorious Impofture ; which as it was dexteroufly contriv'd, and moft cunningly improv'd by a Party whofe Intereft oblig'd 'em to keep the Secret, fo it happen'd to be difcover'd by very nice and unforeseen Accidents. Had not Gau- den bin difappointed of Winchejler, he had never pleaded his Merit in this affair; nor would his Wife have written her Narrative, had 9i The Life of John Milton? ther,which yet they often; did when Commerce was not near fo general as now, and the whole Earth intirely overfpread with the darknefs of Superftition. I doubt rather the Spurioufnefs of feveral more fuch Books is yet undifcover'd, thro the remotenefs of thofeAges, the death of the Perfons concern'd, and the decay of other Monuments which might give us true Infor¬ mation ; efpecially when weconfider how dan¬ gerous it was always for the weaker fide to lay open the tricks of their Ad verfariCs, tho never fo grofs: and that the prevailing Party did ftri&ly order all thofe Books which offend¬ ed them to be burnt, or otherwife fuppreft, which was accordingly perform'd, as well in obedience to the Laws by fom, as out of con- fcientious Obligations by others, which made the execution more effectual than ufually hap¬ pens in cafes of an ordinary nature. Of this we are furnifh'd with numberlefs Examples by Church-Hiftorians, who have preferv'd intire feveral of the Laws and Orders enacted to this purpofe. From thefe general Remarks I muft obferve in particular, that 'tis likely when Charles the Second knew the forgery of this Book, he was fully confirm'd in the Popifh Religion, which in his Childhood he learnt of his Mother, and in his Exile by his foren Con- verfation. The Author of de- fires him to adhere to the Church of England, as neceffary both for his Soul's peace, and that of the Kingdom. This and the like Exhorta¬ tions 94 The Life of John Milton." Ormond made a contemtuous mention'Iof General Cromwei, "who, according " to him, had don in a few years more eminent