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This Author: Nicholas McDowell
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This Publisher: Princeton University Press

Poet of Revolution: The Making of John Milton by Nicholas McDowell

Poet of Revolution: The Making of John Milton

by Nicholas McDowell


Title Details

Narrator
 
Unabridged Edition
Running Time
15 Hrs. 56 Min.
Year Released
2020

Description

This audiobook, narrated by Richard Pryal, brings Milton's formative years to life, providing an entirely new account of the poet's political radicalization.

John Milton (1608-1674) has a unique claim on literary and intellectual history as the author of both Paradise Lost, the greatest narrative poem in English, and prose defenses of the execution of Charles I that influenced the French and American revolutions. Tracing Milton's literary, intellectual, and political development with unprecedented depth and understanding, Poet of Revolution is an unmatched biographical account of the formation of the mind that would go on to create Paradise Lost - but would first justify the killing of a king.

Biographers of Milton have always struggled to explain how the young poet became a notorious defender of regicide and other radical ideas such as freedom of the press, religious toleration, and republicanism. In this groundbreaking intellectual biography of Milton's formative years, Nicholas McDowell draws on recent archival discoveries to reconcile at last the poet and polemicist. He charts Milton's development from his earliest days as a London schoolboy, through his university life and travels in Italy, to his emergence as a public writer during the English Civil War. At the same time, McDowell presents fresh, richly contextual readings of Milton's best-known works from this period, including the "Nativity Ode", "L'Allegro" and "Il Penseroso", Comus, and "Lycidas".

Challenging biographers who claim that Milton was always a secret radical, Poet of Revolution shows how the events that provoked civil war in England combined with Milton's astonishing program of self-education to instill the beliefs that would shape not only his political prose, but also his later epic masterpiece.


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