[Life of John Milton by Richard Garnett]@TWC D-Link bookLife of John Milton CHAPTER VI 26/33
His instrument was usually the organ, the counterpart of the stately harmony of his own verse.
To these relaxations must be added the society of faithful friends, among whom Andrew Marvell, Dr.Paget, and Cyriack Skinner are particularly named.
Nor did Edward Phillips neglect his uncle, finding him, as Aubrey implies, "most familiar and free in his conversation to those to whom most sour in his way of education." Milton had made him "a songster," and we can imagine the "sober, silent, and most harmless person" (Evelyn) opening his lips to accompany his uncle's music.
Of Milton's manner Aubrey says, "Extreme pleasant in his conversation, and at dinner, supper, etc., but satirical." Visitors usually came from six till eight, if at all, and the day concluded with a light supper, sometimes of olives, which we may well imagine fraught for him with Tuscan memories, a pipe, and a glass of water.
This picture of plain living and high thinking is confirmed by the testimony of the Quaker Thomas Ellwood, who for a short time read to him, and who describes the kindness of his demeanour, and the pains he took to teach the foreign method of pronouncing Latin.
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