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Edward Phillips
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{{short description|English author}} {{Other people}} {{Use dmy dates|date=June 2024}} '''Edward Phillips''' (August 1630 β c. 1696) was an English author. ==Life== He was the son of Edward Phillips, of the [[Crown Office in Chancery]], and his wife Anne, only sister of [[John Milton]], the poet. Edward Phillips the younger was born in [[Strand, London]]. His father died in 1631, and Anne eventually married her husband's successor in the crown office, Thomas Agar. Edward Phillips and his younger brother, [[John Phillips (author)|John]], were educated by Milton. Edward entered [[Magdalen Hall, Oxford]], in November 1650, but left the university in 1651 to work as a bookseller's clerk in London. Although he did not share Milton's religious and political views, and seems, to judge from the free character of his ''Mysteries of Love and Eloquence'' (1658), to have undergone a certain revulsion from his [[Puritan]] upbringing, he remained on affectionate terms with his uncle to the end. He was tutor to the son of [[John Evelyn]], the diarist, from 1663 to 1672 at [[Sayes Court]], [[Deptford]], and in 1677β1679 in the family of [[Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington]], a prominent Roman Catholic. The date of Phillips's death is unknown but his last book is dated 1696. ==Works== His most important work is ''Theatrum poetarum'' (1675), a list of the chief poets of all ages and countries, but principally of the English poets, with short critical notes and a prefatory ''Discourse of the Poets and Poetry'', which has usually been traced to Milton's hand. He also wrote ''[[The New World of English Words]]'' (1658), which went through many editions; a new edition of ''[[Richard Baker (chronicler)|Baker]]'s Chronicle'', of which the section on the period from 1650 to 1658 was written by himself from the royalist standpoint; a supplement (1676) to [[John Speed]]'s ''Theatre of Great Britain''; and in 1684 ''Enchiridion linguae latinae'', said to have been taken chiefly from notes prepared by Milton. [[John Aubrey]] states that all Milton's papers came into Phillips's hands, and in 1694 he published a translation of his ''Letters of State'' with a valuable memoir. ==References== *{{EB1911|wstitle = Phillips, Edward |volume=21}} *{{cite DNB|wstitle = Phillips, Edward (1630β1696?)|first=Sidney |last=Lee|volume=45}} ==Further reading== *Brent L. Nelson, "The Social Context of Rhetoric, 1500β1660," ''The Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 281: British Rhetoricians and Logicians, 1500β1660, Second Series'', Detroit: Gale, 2003, pp. 355β377. *J. Milton French, "Milton, Ramus, and Edward Phillips," ''Modern Philology'', vol. 47, no. 2, 1949, pp. 82β87. ==External links== {{John Milton|state=collapsed}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Phillips, Edward}} [[Category:English non-fiction writers]] [[Category:1630 births]] [[Category:1690s deaths]] [[Category:Alumni of Magdalen Hall, Oxford]] [[Category:English male non-fiction writers]]
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