“John Milton, in addition to other most elegant writings of his, both in English and Latin, has recently published ‘Paradise Lost,’ a poem which, whether we regard the sublimity of the subject, or the combined pleasantness and majesty of the style, or the sublimity of the invention, or the beauty of its images and descriptions of nature, will, if I mistake not, receive the name of truly heroic, inasmuch as by the suffrages of many not unqualified to judge, it is reputed to have reached the perfection of this kind of poetry.”
The “many not unqualified” undoubtedly included the first critic of the age, Dryden. Lord Buckhurst is also named as an admirer—pleasing anecdotes respecting the practical expression of his admiration, and of Sir John Denham’s, seem apocryphal.
While “Paradise Lost” was thus slowly upbearing its author to the highest heaven of fame, Milton was achieving other titles to renown, one of which he deemed nothing inferior. We shall remember Ellwood’s hint that he might find something to say about Paradise Found, and the “muse” into which it cast him. When, says the Quaker, he waited upon Milton after the latter’s return to London, Milton “showed me his second poem, called ‘Paradise Regained,’ and in a pleasant tone said to me, ’This is owing to you; for you put it into my head by the question you put to me at Chalfont; which before I had not thought of.’” Ellwood does not tell us the date of this visit, and Phillips may be right in believing that “Paradise Regained” was entirely composed after the publication of “Paradise Lost”; but it seems unlikely that the conception should have slumbered so long in Milton’s mind, and the most probable date is between Michaelmas, 1665, and Lady-day, 1666. Phillips records that Milton could never hear with