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even of cold praise, would have been more injurious to the critic than to the poet. The Paradise Lost was unquestionably a noble poem: but if it could have been shown to be the produce of theft, the fabricator's proud name would have been annihilated, and the purposes of his enemy accomplished. The hostile attempt was certainly made; and its failure could not have been witnessed without painful disappointment by the writer of that life of Milton, which was unhappily sent into the world under the sanction of the booksellers of London. Of the radical and pervading malignity of this work no doubt can for an instant be entertained by any dispassionate reader, and it may justly be questioned whether, as the writer of the Rambler or of the Life of Milton, Dr. Johnson has evinced more friendliness or more enmity to the cause of truth, has effected more good or offered more injury to the

Here are panegyric and benevolence, of which Milton and his granddaughter are the objects, of as high and ardent a nature as any which have been expressed by Dr. Johnson. In diction and imagery the Scotch schoolmaster is evidently inferior to the English critic and moralist:—but in admiration of the deceased poet, and in charity towards the survivor of the poet's family, the notorious Lauder refuses to be outdone by the celebrated Johnson.

great interests of his species. By a party among my contemporaries I am aware that this doubt will be strongly, and, perhaps, acrimoniously resented: but if a page, like mine, may hope to survive to a distant age, I feel assured that, by the judgment of a generation remote from the prejudices of the present, I shall be absolved from the charge of wounding truth to gratify passion, even though I should assert that the delinquency of the libellous biographer is ill compensated by the merit of the monotonous and heavygaited morality of the sombre and dogmatic essayist.

T. Bensley, Printer,

Bolt Court, Fleet Street, London.

THE END.

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... conduct on the death of Bouquet, Mr. 556.

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lous conqueror of Britain, 137 | Commonwealth and monarchy con-

note.

Bucer, Martin, 201, 252 note.

Bucolic verfe, character of, 129

note.

Burke Edmund, 305, 425 note.
Burnet, bishop, 294 note.

Burney, Dr. C. 22 note.

C.

Cafar, Julius, 376.
Calamy, Edmund, 191.
Calvin, 252 note.

Cambridge Latin Dictionary, 404.
Caroline, queen, 528.

Chappel, Wm. reputed author of
the Whole Duty of Man, 19.
Charlemont, earl of, 505.

Charles I. violence of his conduct,
171.

popith intrigues condu-
ced to his misfortunes, 186 note.
....civil war in his time
eminent for benignity and mo-
deration, 241.

..... his conduct after his laft
defeat, 241.

character, 274.
corpfe faid to have

been hung at Tyburn, 433 note.
remarks on his execu-

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trafted, 421.

more humane than
the monarchy, 430 note.
Comnenus, Andronicus, 283 note.
Controverfy, 195.

Council of ftate, 261.
Cowley, 43.

Cowper, Wm. 12.

Cradock, Mr. 505.

Criticism cannot render dull poetry

pleafing, 489.

Cromwell, 242, 245, 264 note, 498,

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D.

Dante, 223, 470 note.

Dati, Carlo, 91.

Davenant, bishop, 172.

Davis, Mifs, 205.

Dawes, 22 note.

D'Avenant, fir William, his life
faved by Milton, 428.
Delille, abbé, 485 note.
Deodati, Charles, 1ft elegy to, 22.
letter to, 71.
account of him,

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Theodore, 126.

Desborough, 409 note, 410.

Divines,

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fentially neceffary, 414.

Gray, 30.

Griffith, Dr. Matthew, 425.

Grotius, 89.

H.

Education, Milton's plan of, 155, Hale, fir Matthew, 396.

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