[The Life of John Milton, Volume 5 (of 7), 1654-1660 by David Masson]@TWC D-Link bookThe Life of John Milton, Volume 5 (of 7), 1654-1660 CHAPTER II 23/279
But I hope Fame lies in this.
For who could hear without the greatest pain--what I for my part hardly, nay not to the extent of hardly, bring my mind to credit--that there is a man living among Christians who, being himself a concrete of every form of outrageous iniquity, could so censure others ?" MILTON'S PRODIGIOUS SELF-ESTEEM:--"All which has so elated you that you would be reckoned next after the very first man in England, and sometimes put yourself higher than the supreme Cromwell himself; whom you name familiarly, without giving him any title of rank, whom you lecture under the guise of praising him, to whom you dictate laws, assign boundaries to his rights, prescribe duties, suggest counsels, and even hold out threats if he shall not behave accordingly.
You grant him arms and rule; you claim genius and the gown for yourself.
'_He only is to be called great_,' you say, '_who has either done great things_'-- Cromwell, to wit!---'_or teaches great things_'-- Milton on Divorce, to wit!--'_or writes of them worthily_'-- the same twice-great Milton, I suppose, in his Defence of the English People!" How does Morus proceed in the main business of clearing his own character from Milton's charges? His plan was to produce a dated and authenticated series of testimonials from others, extending over the period of his life which had been attacked, and to interweave these with explanations and an autobiographic memoir.
He has reached the eightieth page of his book before he properly begins this enterprise. He gives first a testimonial from the Genevan Church, dated Jan.
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