the Appenine, and passing thro’ Bologna, and
Ferrara, he arrived at Venice, in which city he spent
a month; and having shipped off the books he had collected
in his travels, he took his course thro’ Verona,
Milan, and along the Lake Leman to Geneva. In
this city he continued some time, meeting there with
people of his own principles, and contracted an intimate
friendship with Giovanni Deodati, the most learned
professor of Divinity, whose annotations on the bible
are published in English; and from thence returning
to France the same way that he had gone before, he
arrived safe in England after an absence of fifteen
months, in which Milton had seen much of the world,
read the characters of famous men, examined the policy
of different countries, and made more extensive improvements
than travellers of an inferior genius, and less penetration,
can be supposed to do in double the time. Soon
after his return he took a handsome house in Aldersgate-street,
and undertook the education of his sister’s
two sons, upon a plan of his own. In this kind
of scholastic solitude he continued some time, but
he was not so much immersed in academical studies,
as to stand an indifferent spectator of what was acted
upon the public theatre of his country. The nation
was in great ferment in 1641, and the clamour against
episcopacy running very high, Milton who discovered
how much inferior in eloquence and learning the puritan
teachers were to the bishops, engaged warmly with
the former in support of the common cause, and exercised
all the power of which he was capable, in endeavouring
to overthrow the prelatical establishment, and accordingly
published five tracts relating to church government;
they were all printed at London in 4to. The first
was intitled, Reformation touching Church Discipline
in England, and the Causes that have hitherto hindered
it: two books written to a friend. The second
was of Prelatical Episcopacy, and whether it may be
deducted from Apostolical Times, by virtue of those
Testimonies which are alledged to that purpose in some
late treatises; one whereof goes under the name of
James Usher archbishop of Armagh. The third was
the Reason of Church Government urged against the
Prelacy, by Mr. John Milton, in two books. The
fourth was Animadversions upon the Remonstrants Defence
against Smectymnuus; and the fifth an Apology for
a Pamphlet called, a Modest Confutation of the Animadversions
upon the Remonstrants against Smectymnuus; or as the
title page is in some copies, an Apology for Smectymnuus,
with the Reason of Church Government, by John Milton.
In the year 1643 Milton married the daughter of Richard Powel, Esq; of Forrest-hill in Oxfordshire; who not long after obtaining leave of her husband to pay a visit to her father in the country, but, upon repeated messages to her, refusing to return, Milton seemed disposed to marry another, and in 1644 published the Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce; the Judgment of Martin Bucer concerning Divorce, and the year following


