Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

edition of Milton, so richly furnished with illustrations by the learning, diligence, and zeal of the gentleman, just named, this publication will not contain any notes, except the fragment of Cowper's commentary on Paradise Lost, and a selection from those, that were printed with his Miltonic translations.

The Milton of Mr. Todd may be regarded as a standard library book; these smaller volumes may occasionally afford an agreeable travelling companion to such readers, as may feel gratified in seeing two poets, so congenial as Milton and Cowper, thus united.

[ocr errors]

You will find, with Andreini's Adamo, some account of a brief Italian Epic Poem on the Loss of Paradise, printed above thirty years before Milton visited Italy. I mean the Adamo of Soranzo, a poem even more rare than the drama of Andreini!

The dedication prefixed to my Life of Milton in 1796, is retained not only from regard to the departed amiable critic of Winchester, but because it contains literary sentiments, that had the approbation of our beloved Cowper. My ambition is to render this book, which will be endeared to us by bearing the name of Cowper's Milton, a proof of our affectionate attention to his wishes. May it prove a lasting and honorable record of that inexhaustible tenderness and zeal, with which you, his favorite kinsman, were used to serve him as a kind secretary in his season of mental activity, and as an inestimable attendant, and guardian, in his days of calamitous depression. You will be prosperous and happy indeed, if your prosperity and happiness are proportioned to the care and kindness, with which you watched over the most interesting of suf ferers.

At all events, we shall ever sympathise, in a tender veneration for his memory; and I hope we may both exclaim, in

the words of the younger Pliny, and with the honest fervency of indelible affection,

"Sunt qui defunctorum amicos agunt.”

Believe me ever, my dear friend,

Most faithfully yours,

Felpham, March 31, 1810.

W. HAYLEY.

[ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

MY PLEASANT AND RESPECTED FRIEND,

IN prefixing your name to this volume, I feel and confess the double influence of an affectionate and of an ambitious desire to honor you and myself. Our lost and lamented friend Gibbon has told us, I think very truly, in dedicating a juvenile work to his father, that there are but two kinds of dedications, which can do honor either to the patron or the author-the first arising from literary esteem, the second from personal affection. If either of these two characteristics may be sufficient to give propriety to a dedication, I have little to apprehend for the present, which has certainly the advantage of uniting the two.

[blocks in formation]

The kind and friendly manner in which you commended the first edition of this Life might alone have induced me to inscribe a more ample copy of

it to that literary veteran, whose applause is so justly dear to me. I have additional inducements in recollecting your animated and enlightened regard for the glory of Milton. It is pleasing to address a sympathetic friend on a subject that interests the fancy and the heart. I remember, with peculiar gratification, the liberality and frankness, with which you lamented to me the extreme severity of the late Mr. Warton, in describing the controversial writings of Milton. I honor the rare integrity of your mind, my candid friend, which took the part of injured genius and probity against the prejudices of a brother, eminent as a scholar, and entitled also, in many points of view, to your love and admiration. I sympathize with you most cordially in regretting the severity to which I allude, so little to be expected from the general temper of the critic, and from that affectionate spirit, with which he had vindicated the poetry of Milton from the misre

« AnteriorContinuar »