Milton and the Making of Paradise Lost

Milton and the Making of Paradise Lost
Title Milton and the Making of Paradise Lost PDF eBook
Author William Poole
Publisher Harvard University Press
Total Pages 385
Release 2017-10-09
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0674971078

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William Poole recounts Milton's life as England’s self-elected national poet and explains how the greatest poem of the English language came to be written. How did a blind man compose this staggeringly complex, intensely visual work? Poole explores how Milton’s life and preoccupations inform the poem itself—its structure, content, and meaning.

Milton and the Making of Paradise Lost

Milton and the Making of Paradise Lost
Title Milton and the Making of Paradise Lost PDF eBook
Author William Poole
Publisher Harvard University Press
Total Pages 255
Release 2017-10-09
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0674983203

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“An authoritative, and accessible, introduction to Milton’s life and an engaging examination of the process of composing Paradise Lost” (Choice). In early 1642 Milton promised English readers a work of literature so great that “they should not willingly let it die.” Twenty-five years later, the epic poem Paradise Lost appeared in print. In the interim, however, the poet had gone totally blind and had also become a controversial public figure―a man who had argued for the abolition of bishops, freedom of the press, the right to divorce, and the prerogative of a nation to depose and put to death an unsatisfactory ruler. These views had rendered him an outcast. William Poole devotes particular attention to Milton’s personal life: his reading and education, his ambitions and anxieties, and the way he presented himself to the world. Although always a poet first, Milton was also a theologian and civil servant, vocations that informed the composition of his masterpiece. At the emotional center of this narrative is the astounding fact that Milton lost his sight in 1652. How did a blind man compose this intensely visual work? Poole opens up the world of Milton’s masterpiece to modern readers, first by exploring Milton’s life and intellectual preoccupations and then by explaining the poem itself―its structure, content, and meaning. “Poole’s book may well become what he shows Paradise Lost soon became: a classic.” —Times Literary Supplement “Smart and original . . . Demonstrates with astonishing exactitude how Milton’s life and―most impressively of all―his reading enabled this epic.” ―The Spectator “This deeply learned and lucidly written book . . . makes this most ambitious of early modern poets accessible to his modern readers.” ―Journal of British Studies

Paradise Lost, Book 3

Paradise Lost, Book 3
Title Paradise Lost, Book 3 PDF eBook
Author John Milton
Publisher
Total Pages 68
Release 1915
Genre
ISBN

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Paradise Lost

Paradise Lost
Title Paradise Lost PDF eBook
Author John Milton
Publisher
Total Pages 464
Release 1711
Genre Bible
ISBN

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Beautiful Sublime

Beautiful Sublime
Title Beautiful Sublime PDF eBook
Author Leslie Moore
Publisher Stanford University Press
Total Pages 256
Release 1990-03-01
Genre Poetry
ISBN 0804766118

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'Sublime' and 'Milton' - no other pairing is used more frequently in early discussions of the author of Paradise Lost: Addison finds Milton's genius 'wonderfully turned to the Sublime', John Dennis calls Milton 'the sublimist of all our poets', while Jonathan Richardson concludes that Milton's mind 'is truly poetical. Great, strong, elegant and sublime'. Modern critics look askance at these 'sublime Miltonists', who are charged with forcing Paradise Lost, they took what was essentially a Restoration term and challenged it with an alternative aesthetic category - the beautiful. Though beauty did mark a certain generic stability (in a Burkean sense), it came increasingly to represent generic transformation, which in its most radical form recast the notion of a 'sublime Milton'. It is this play of oxymorons - sublime epic and beautiful sublime - that marks the brilliance of the early eighteenth century' criticism of Paradise Lost. To explore the early-eighteenth-century view of the 'sublime Milton', the author analyzes the work of five readers of Paradise Lost during the years 1701-34: Joseph Addison, the only writer of the five who attained any lasting fame; John Dennis, by far the most important - and overlooked - of the early Miltonists; Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea, author of a brilliant parody of Book 8 and of even more remarkable accounts of Eve; Jane Adams, a lyric poet from Scotland who re-imagined the domestic hierarchy of Adam and Eve; and Jonathan Richardson, who attempted the first Christian interpretation of Paradise Lost and who authored the first biography of Milton as a 'sublime poet'. Together these critics represent the richness, cohesion, and variety of the interpretive community reading Paradise Lost in the first decades of the eighteenth century.

Paradise Lost

Paradise Lost
Title Paradise Lost PDF eBook
Author John Milton
Publisher
Total Pages 106
Release 1889
Genre
ISBN

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Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Other Poems. the Poetical Works of John Milton

Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Other Poems. the Poetical Works of John Milton
Title Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Other Poems. the Poetical Works of John Milton PDF eBook
Author John Milton
Publisher
Total Pages 548
Release 2012-05
Genre History
ISBN 9781781391730

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"Including Paradise lost, Paradise regain'd & 50 other works" -- Cover.