No celebrity ever had fewer friends. From all who might have called themselves such, he was separated by hostility of party, rancour of sect or by that almost repellent isolation of character to which reference has already been made. When at the highest of his political fame, he had almost boasted himself of this "splendid isolation,"--"I have very little acquaintance with those in power, inasmuch as I keep very much to my own house, and prefer to do so." At heart a Republican beyond the conception of any Roundhead,--cherishing a form of religion so recondite that it could be classed under no heading, since he ignored both public worship and family prayer,--having given offence to all and sundry by his outspoken theories upon divorce and divine right,--Milton presented to most men a dangerous personality. And most of all now, when the wits of the Restoration roues could be sharpened upon him, and when the heathen, as he considered them, roistered and ruffled it through the city that had "returned to her wallowing in the mire."

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