Reseña del editor:
Sir Sapcotes Harrington of Exton, in Rutlandshire, was born in the reign of James the First, in January 1611, five years before the death of Shakespeare. He was two or three years younger than John Milton. His great-grandfather was Sir James Harrington, who married Lucy, daughter of Sir William Sidney, lived with her to their golden wedding-day, and had eighteen children, through whom he counted himself, before his death, patriarch in a family that in his own time produced eight Dukes, three Marquises, seventy Earls, twenty-seven Viscounts, and thirty-six Barons, sixteen of them all being Knights of the Garter. James Harrington sideal of a Commonwealth was the design, therefore, of a man in many ways connected with the chief nobility of England. Sir Sapcotes Harrington married twice, and had by each of his wives two sons and two daughters. James Harrington was eldest son by the first marriage, which was to Jane, daughter of Sir William Samuel of Upton, in Northamptonshire. James Harrington sbrother became a merchant; of his half-brothers, one went to sea, the other became a captain in the army. As a child, James Harrington was studious, and so sedate that it was said playfully of him, he rather kept his parents and teachers in awe than needed correction; but in after-life his quick wit made him full of playfulness in conversation. In 1629 he entered Trinity College, Oxford, as a Gentleman Commoner. There he had for tutor William Chillingworth, a Fellow of the College, who after conversion to the Church of Rome had reasoned his way back into Protestant opinion?. Chillingworth became a famous champion of Protestantism in the question between the Churches, although many Protestants attacked him as unsound because he would not accept the Athanasian Creed and had some other reservations. Harrington prepared himself for foreign travel by study of modern languages,
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