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PR 3570

A5

1868

Ge

Eng

English Reprints.

JOHN MILTON.

AREOPAGITICA.

[24 November] 1644.

PRECEDED BY ILLUSTRATIVE DOCUMENTS.

CAREFULLY EDITED BY

EDWARD ARBER,

Affociate, King's College, London, F.S.A., F.R.G.S., &c.

LONDON:

5 QUEEN SQUARE, BLOOMSBURY, W.C

Ent. Stat. Hall.]

I January, 1868.

[All Rights referved.

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(2) It is an undervaluing and vilifying of the
whole nation

(3) It brings disrepute upon the Ministers,

Proof. The fervile condition of learning in Italy,

the home of licencing,

5. It may prove a nursing mother to fects,

6. It will be the step-dame to Truth :-
(1) By difenabling us in the maintenance of what

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(2) By the incredible loss it entails in hindering

the fearch after new Truth,

Description of the English nation,

The power of Truth,

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An appeal for toleration, spiritual unity and peace,

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AREOPAGITICA.'

INTRODUCTION.

HAT half-living thing-a book: may be regarded in many ways. It may be confidered in connection with the circumftances which led to its conception and creation; and in the midst of which it appeared. It may be studied, as exhibiting the moral intent, the mental power of its author. Its contents may be analysed as to their intrinfic truthfulness or falsity. We may trace and identify its influence upon its own age and on fucceeding generations. This is an apprehenfion of the mind of a book.

More than this. We may examine its style, its power and manner of expreffing that mind. The ringing collocation of its words, the harmonious cadence of its fentences, the flashing gem-like beauty' of isolated paffages, the juft mapping out of the general argument, the due fubordination of its several parts, their final inweaving into one overpowering conclufion: these are the features, difcovering, illuminating, enforcing the mind of a book.

Much of what is in books is false, much only half true, much true. It is impoffible to separate the tares from the wheat. Every one, therefore-of neceffitymust read discriminatively; often fifting and searching for first principles, often tefting the catenation of an argument, often treasuring up incidental truths for future use; enjoying—as delights by the way-whatever felicity of expreffion, gorgeousness of imagination, vividness of description, or aptness of illustration may glance, like sunshine, athwart the path: the journey's end being Truth.

The purpose through these English Reprints is to bring this modern age face to face with the works of our forefathers. The Editor and his clumsy framework

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