[The Life of John Milton, Volume 5 (of 7), 1654-1660 by David Masson]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of John Milton, Volume 5 (of 7), 1654-1660

CHAPTER II
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Two women-servants, with perhaps a man or boy to wait on Milton personally, may have completed the household, unless Milton's two nephews are to be reckoned as also belonging to it.
That the nephews still hovered about Milton, and resided with him occasionally, together or by turn, giving him their services as amanuenses, appears to be certain.

Edward Phillips was now twenty-five years of age, and John Phillips twenty-four; but neither of them had taken to any profession, or had any other means of subsistence than private pedagogy, with such work for the booksellers as could be obtained by their own ability or through their uncle's interest.

The younger, as we know, had made some name for himself by his _Joannis Philippi, Angli, Responsio_ of 1652, written in behalf of his uncle, and under his uncle's superintendence; and it is probable that both the brothers had in the interval been doing odds and ends of literary work.

There are verses by both among the commendatory poems prefixed to the first two parts of Henry Lawes's _Ayres and Dialogues for one, two, or three Voices_, published in 1653, as a sequel to that previous publication of 1648, entitled _Choice Psalmes put into musick for three Voices_, which had contained Milton's own sonnet to Lawes; and in the _Divine Poems_ of Thomas Washbourne, a Gloucestershire clergyman, published in 1654, there are "Verses to his friend Thomas Washbourne" by Edward Phillips.

In this latter year, I find, John Phillips must have been away for some time in Scotland, for in a letter to Thurloe dated "Wood Street, Compter, 11th April, 1654", the writer--no other than Milton's interesting friend Andrew Sandelands, now back from Scotland himself--mentions Phillips as there instead.


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